Conspicuous Leisure: Optimal Income Taxation when both Relative Consumption and Relative Leisure Matter
Abstract
Previous studies on public policy under relative consumption concerns have ignored
the role of leisure comparisons. This paper considers a two-type optimal nonlinear
income tax model where people care both about their relative consumption and their
relative leisure. Increased consumption positionality typically implies higher marginal
income tax rates for both the high-ability and the low-ability type, whereas leisure
positionality has an offsetting role. However, this offsetting role is not symmetric;
concern about relative leisure implies a progressive income tax component, i.e., a
component that is larger for the high-ability than for the low-ability type. Moreover,
leisure positionality does not modify the policy rule for public good provision when
the income tax is optimally chosen.
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Date
2009-04-21Author
Aronsson, Thomas
Johansson-Stenman, Olof
Keywords
Optimal taxation
redistribution
public goods
relative consumption
status
positional goods
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
358
Language
eng