Inequality Aversion and Marginal Income Taxation
Abstract
This paper deals with tax policy responses to inequality aversion by examining the first-best
Pareto-efficient marginal tax structure when people are inequality averse. In doing so, we
distinguish between four different and widely used models of inequality aversion. The results
show that empirically and experimentally quantified degrees of inequality aversion have
potentially very strong implications for Pareto-efficient marginal income taxation. It also
turns out that the exact type of inequality aversion (self-centered vs. non-self-centered), and the measures of inequality used, matter a great deal. For example, based on simulation results mimicking the disposable income distribution in the US in 2013, the preferences suggested by Fehr and Schmidt (1999) imply monotonically increasing marginal income taxes, with large negative marginal tax rates for low-income individuals and large positive marginal tax rates for high-income individuals. In contrast, the often considered similar model by Bolton and Ockenfels (2000) implies close to zero marginal income tax rates for all.
Other description
JEL: D03, D62, H23
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-10Author
Aronsson, Thomas
Johansson-Stenman, Olof
Keywords
Pareto-efficient taxation
Inequality aversion
Inequity aversion
Self-centered inequality aversion
Non-self-centered inequality aversion
Fehr and Schmidt preferences
Bolton and Ockenfels preferences
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
673
Language
eng
Metadata
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