Veblens Theory of the Leisure Class Revisited: Implications for Optimal Income Taxation
Abstract
Almost all previous studies on public policy under relative consumption concerns have ignored the role of leisure for status comparisons. Inspired by Veblen (1899), this paper considers a two-type optimal income tax model, where people care about their relative consumption, and where the importance of relative consumption increases with the use of leisure due to increased consumption visibility. We show that increased consumption positionality typically implies higher marginal income tax rates for both ability-types. Using a leisure-weighted measure of reference consumption, rather than a measure where leisure plays no role as in the previous literature, increases the marginal income tax rate implemented for the low-ability type and decreases the marginal income tax rate implemented for the high-ability type, i.e., it gives rise to a regressive tax component.
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2010-08Author
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
466
Language
eng