Charity as Income Redistribution: A Model with Optimal Taxation, Status, and Social Stigma
Abstract
Our framework integrates (i) public and private redistribution, (ii) the warm glow of giving and stigma of receiving charitable donations, and (iii) status concerns emanating from social comparisons with respect to charitable donations and private consumption. Whether charity should be taxed or supported largely depends on the relative strengths of the warm glow of giving and the stigma of receiving charity, respectively, and on the positional externalities caused by charitable donations. In addition, imposing stigma on the mimicker (which relaxes the self-selection constraint) strengthens the case for subsidizing charity. We also consider a case where the government is unable to target the charitable giving through a direct tax instrument, and we examine how the optimal marginal income tax structure should be adjusted in response to charitable giving. Numerical simulations demonstrate that the quantitative effects of the aforementioned mechanisms can be substantial.
Other description
JEL: D03, D62, H21, H23
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2019-09Author
Aronsson, Thomas
Johansson-Stenman, Olof
Wendner, Ronald
Keywords
Conspicuous consumption
conspicuous charitable giving
social status
optimal income taxation
warm glow
stigma
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
775
Language
eng