Traditional optimal commodity tax analysis, dating back to Ramsey (1927), prescribes that to maximize welfare one should impose higher taxes on goods with lower demand elasticities. Yet policy makers do not stress minimizing efficiency costs as a desideratum. In this note we revisit the commodity tax problem, and show that the attractiveness of the Ramsey inverse-elasticity prescription can itself be inverted if the tax system is chosen – or at least strongly influenced – by taxpayers who are overly confident of their ability, relative to others, to substitute away from taxed goods.
An inverse-Ramsey tax rule / L. Micheletto, D.T. Moore, D. Reck, J. Slemrod. - In: JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ECONOMICS. - ISSN 0047-2727. - 251:(2025 Nov 01), pp. 105501.1-105501.10. [10.1016/j.jpubeco.2025.105501]
An inverse-Ramsey tax rule
L. MichelettoPrimo
;
2025
Abstract
Traditional optimal commodity tax analysis, dating back to Ramsey (1927), prescribes that to maximize welfare one should impose higher taxes on goods with lower demand elasticities. Yet policy makers do not stress minimizing efficiency costs as a desideratum. In this note we revisit the commodity tax problem, and show that the attractiveness of the Ramsey inverse-elasticity prescription can itself be inverted if the tax system is chosen – or at least strongly influenced – by taxpayers who are overly confident of their ability, relative to others, to substitute away from taxed goods.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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