tax policy analysis

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Fiscal Reform and Economic Governance Contract No. GEG -I-00-04-00001-00, order No. 06 Tax Policy Analysis 2007 A Learning Tool of the Fiscal Reform and Economic Governance Project www.fiscalreform.net

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Tax Policy Analysis. A Learning Tool of the Fiscal Reform and Economic Governance Project www.fiscalreform.net. 2007. User note. The user should print this MSPowerpoint presentation using the notes view, since the note pages provide much additional information. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tax Policy Analysis

Fiscal Reform and Economic GovernanceContract No. GEG -I-00-04-00001-00, order No. 06

Tax Policy Analysis

2007

A Learning Tool of the Fiscal Reform and Economic Governance Project

www.fiscalreform.net

Page 2: Tax Policy Analysis

User note

• The user should print this MSPowerpoint presentation using the notes view, since the note pages provide much additional information.

• This course requires some background in microeconomic analysis

• Mini-course duration: 5 hours.• Fiscal Reform and Economic Governance Project advisors are

available to provide this training to USAID offices around the world.

• Contact David Dod, CTO at [email protected] or Mark Gallagher, COP at [email protected].

Page 3: Tax Policy Analysis

Course outlineA. Objectives

B. Analytical Tools

B.1 Criteria for evaluating taxes

B.2 Economic efficiency

B.3 Tax on land

B.4 Personal income tax

B.5 Tax incidence

B.6 Conclusions

C. Analysis of tax incentives

C.1 Types of tax incentives

C.2 Arguments for and against

C.3 Analytical tools

C.4 Case studies

C.5 Consensus among experts

C.6 Conclusions

D. Resources

Page 4: Tax Policy Analysis

A. Objectives

• This Learning Tool was prepared for professionals with some training in economics. It will provide professionals with some of the basic analytical tools they need in their work in analyzing taxation and in working on teams to reform tax systems. Understanding and applying these analytic tools will help deepen the analyst’s understanding of the economic and social issues related to taxation and will take the analyst beyond merely being able to parrot the advice of top professionals in the field.

Page 5: Tax Policy Analysis

B. Analytical tools

B.1 Criteria for evaluating taxes

B.2 Economic efficiency

B.3 Tax on land

B.4 Personal income tax

B.5 Tax incidence

B.6 Conclusions

Page 6: Tax Policy Analysis

B.1 Criteria for Evaluating Taxes

• Efficiency• Simplicity• Equitable treatment

Page 7: Tax Policy Analysis

More criteria: two faces of the same coin

• Concentration

• Erosion

Page 8: Tax Policy Analysis

More criteria

• Objectivity

• Compliance

• Administrative costs

Page 9: Tax Policy Analysis

B.2 Economic efficiency: Deadweight Loss (social welfare)

S = MC

D = AR

Consumer surplus

Producer surplus

Po E: MC = MR = P = AR

Q

P/Pl

Qo

Page 10: Tax Policy Analysis

Deadweight loss from unit tax

S = MC

D = AR

Po

S’ = S + tQ

P/Pl

QQoQ1

Pc

Ps

A B CDEF

Page 11: Tax Policy Analysis

Continue……….

S = MC

D = AR

Po

S’ = S + tQ

P/Pl

QQoQ1

Pc

Ps

A B CDEF

Page 12: Tax Policy Analysis

S’

S’

S

S

D: e < 1

D: e > 1

Relative price indices

Quantities

Quantities

Market for Cigarettes

Market for Gouda

Excess burden and elasticity of demand

Page 13: Tax Policy Analysis

Excess burden and the tax rate

S = MC

D = AR

S’ = S + tQ

P/Pl

QQoQ1

C

S’’ = S + 2tQ

Q2

A

B

Page 14: Tax Policy Analysis

B.3 Tax on land

Po

P’

Q0=Q’

DoD’

Relative priceOf land

Quantity of land

Page 15: Tax Policy Analysis

B.4 Personal income tax

<- work : leisure ->

Net Earnings

24 hours per dayAll workand no play

Wo W’

Io

I’ I’

Io

Page 16: Tax Policy Analysis

Personal income tax (with downward sloping labor supply curve)

<- work : leisure ->

Net Earnings

24 hours per dayAll workand no play

WoW’

Io

I’I’

Io

Page 17: Tax Policy Analysis

Personal income tax with no impact on labor supply

<- work : leisure ->

Net Earnings

24 hours per dayAll workand no play

WoW’

I’

Io

Page 18: Tax Policy Analysis

Income tax and savings

• Income tax differs from consumption tax

• Consumption tax usually on transactions

• Income tax on accounts

• Tax base is equal to consumption plus saving

• So, does income tax affect saving?

Page 19: Tax Policy Analysis

B.5 Tax incidence

• Who really bears the burden of a tax

• It is measured in terms of lost surplus

• How taxes are really shared, depends on supply and

demand elasticities

Page 20: Tax Policy Analysis

Tax incidence: excise unit tax

S’

S’

S

S

D: e < 1

D: e > 1

Relative price indices

Quantities

Market for Cigarettes

Market for Gouda

Tax per unit

Tax per unit

Q

Q

Cs

Cg

Pg

Pc

Page 21: Tax Policy Analysis

Tax incidence: import tariffs

Domestic market forimported shoes

Domestic demand forImported shoes

World supplyPw

Pd = Pw(1+t)

Tax rate = t

D

A B

Page 22: Tax Policy Analysis

Incidence: VAT

• Full incidence is on the consumer• Since poor people consume all of their income but

the rich only a portion, then it must be true that the tax is regressive?

• Savings is merely future consumption, so maybe not.

Page 23: Tax Policy Analysis

Incidence and social class

• First, calculate who bears the incidence in the market– Producer– Consumer– Worker– Employer

• Then see how these persons are distributed by income class• Some questions

Page 24: Tax Policy Analysis

B.6 Conclusions

• Tax bases should be as broad as possible• Tax rates should be as low as possible• Income tax may or may not reduce the supply of

labor• Income tax may or may not affect savings• Tax incidence is based on elasticities• Tax cannot be exported

Page 25: Tax Policy Analysis

C. Tax Incentives

C.1 Types of tax incentives

C.2 Arguments for and against

C.3 Analytical tools

C.4 Case studies

C.5 Consensus among experts

C.6 Conclusions

Page 26: Tax Policy Analysis

C.1 Typology (profit/CIT)

• Low rates/differential rates• Investment tax credits• Tax holidays• Accelerated depreciation• Loss carry forward

Page 27: Tax Policy Analysis

C.2 Arguments for and against tax incentives

• For– Increase employment– Compensate for bad infrastructure– Encourage business formation– Attract foreign investment

• Against– Unfair, raise burden on others– Unfair competition, I succeed because of tax break not

because of better product, service, or management.– Open to cheating– Usually do not really work

Page 28: Tax Policy Analysis

C.3 Analytical tools

• Cost of capital model

• Favored sector

• Non-favored sector

• Compensated sector

Page 29: Tax Policy Analysis

Cost of capital and investing

CoK

CoK

VMPk

Io I’

Page 30: Tax Policy Analysis

Tax incentives: favored and non-favored industries

CoK

CoK’

Kf Kn

VMPkf

VMPkn

CoKCoK

Lf Ln

LfoLf’ Ln

Page 31: Tax Policy Analysis

Tax incentives: favored and compensating sectors

CoKco

CoK’

Kf Kn

VMPkf

VMPkn

CoKCoK

Lf Lc

LfoLf’ Lco

CoKc’

Lc’

Page 32: Tax Policy Analysis

C.4 Case studies

• Indonesia

• Uganda

• Cape Breton Island in Canada

• What the gurus say

Page 33: Tax Policy Analysis

Indonesia 1984

• Company tax reduced from 45% to 35%

• Selective incentives eliminated, such as: tax holidays,

preferential tax rates, and selective investment allowances

• Results

– Number of Foreign Direct Investment projects continued to rise

– Value of Foreign Direct Investments soared after 1986

– Indonesia’s share of Foreign Direct Investments into ASEAN-

Region nearly doubled by early 1990s

This chart adapted from a workshop presentation made By Dr. Bruce Bolnick of Robert Nathan Associates, Inc. at the World Bank, June 2005.

Page 34: Tax Policy Analysis

Uganda 1997

• Elimination of new tax holidays in favor of uniform 30% company tax, favorable capital allowances

• Effects: 3-year averages, before and after 1997

1994-1996 1998-2000Gross fixed capital formation, % GDP 15.7 % 16.6 %Foreign direct investment $110 m. $170 m.Tax revenue as % GDP 10.4 % 11.6 %Income tax (non P.A.Y.E), % total tax 9.2 % 9.8 %

Data sources: EIU Country Data Online, Bank of Uganda, Annual Report 2000/2001

This chart adapted from a workshop presentation made By Dr. Bruce Bolnick of Robert Nathan Associates, Inc. at the World Bank, June 2005.

Page 35: Tax Policy Analysis

Canada: Cape Breton Island

• Investment tax credit up to 60% of the investments

made on Cape Breton Island against Federal Tax

• Objective was to spur growth and create employment

Page 36: Tax Policy Analysis

Canada results of evaluation

• Led to substitution of capital for labor

• Lowered costs -> increased profit -> increased production in

Cape Breton

• Cost of jobs created was extremely high

• Cheaper to subsidize labor

• Direct subsidy would have created more jobs

• Only 19 of the investments were incremental

• -> Labor productivity, but->Capital productivity, not sustainable

Page 37: Tax Policy Analysis

C.5 What the experts say

• Solidifying positions

• Musgrave and Musgrave 1980

• Dale Chua, IMF: Tax holidays (1995)

• Holland and Van (1998)

• Tanzi and Zee (2000)

Page 38: Tax Policy Analysis

C.6 Conclusions

• Tax incentives are attractive to investors who are planning to invest with or

without the tax incentive.

• Tax incentives may lead to increased investment, production and employment,

but this is not necessarily the case.

• Increases in investment and jobs in one sector may decrease investment and

jobs elsewhere, resulting in a net reduction in overall investment and jobs.

• The jobs created because of tax incentives sometimes have been created at

very high cost

• Very careful analysis should be conducted before even contemplating creating

tax incentives.

Page 39: Tax Policy Analysis

D. Resources

1. Our library on tax policy and administration: http://www.fiscalreform.net/index.php?

option=com_content&task=category&sectionid=8&id=23&Itemid=61

2. OECD’s Centre for Tax Policy and Administration has useful resources. See:

http://www.oecd.org/about/0,2337,en_2649_37427_1_1_1_1_37427,00.html

3. For Bruce Bollnick’s report on Tax Incentives and SADC Region see:

http://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PNACY929.pdf