Taxation 4.5.2 Flashcards

1
Q

Progressive taxation

A

as income rises, a larger percentage of income is paid in tax – UK income Tax

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2
Q

Proportional taxation

A

the % of income paid in tax is constant, no matter what the level of income

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3
Q

Regressive taxation

A

as income rises, a smaller % of income is paid in tax – VAT

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4
Q

Impacts of direct taxation

A
  • Incentives to work
  • Tax revenue – increasing tax rates lead to more tax evasion and avoidance, more tax exiles - laffer curve
  • Income distribution
  • real output and employment
  • price level
  • trade balance
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5
Q

laffer curve

A

relationship between tax revenue and tax rate

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6
Q

other impacts of direct taxation

A

Could also lead to lower disposable income = less derived demand for labour as demand for goods and services has fallen, so there is reduced:

employment, output and inflation

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7
Q

Incentive to work

A
  • argued that high marginal tax rates will ​discourage individuals from working​. Free market economists argue supply of labour elastic and a reduction in marginal taxes on income will lead to significant increase in work as individuals work longer hours, accept promotions and more people join the workforce.
    ● High taxes on high income earners could encourage them to ​move abroad and taxes on the poor may lead to a ​poverty trap​.
    ● It is i​ncome tax ​which is important: high income tax reduces incentives more than high VAT. Thus, a switch from direct to indirect taxes may increase incentives.
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8
Q

Income distribution

A

● A ​progressive tax system will increase the equality of income distribution as more money is proportionally taken from the rich than from the poor. A ​regressive one will decrease income equality. Since direct taxes tend to be progressive and indirect taxes regressive, a move from indirect to direct taxes will improve equality.

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9
Q

Real output and employment

A

● Some taxes affect AD whilst others affect AS. A rise in direct taxes will reduce the level of disposable income an individual has, which will cause a fall in their spending and thus a ​fall in AD. It could also cause a fall in leftover profits for businesses and therefore a fall in investment. The effect this has on output will depend on where the economy is: whether it is at full employment or not.
● On top of this, higher indirect taxes and NICs increase costs for firms and this will decrease SRAS​. This impact will again depend on where the economy is producing.
● It can be argued that income taxes cause a ​disincentive to work and therefore reduce LRAS as the most skilled workers go overseas and more people become inactive

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10
Q

Price level

A

Cost push inflationary pressure or malign deflation

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11
Q

Trade balance

A

● A rise in taxes will decrease income and therefore decrease consumption, theoretically this will also mean ​consumers spend less on imports​. Imports in the UK have been found to be highly income elastic. As a result, the trade balance will improve in the short run.
● However, in the long run, lower AD will reduce businesses’ need to invest and this could ​reduce competitiveness​ meaning that exports decrease

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12
Q

FDI Flows

A

● Low taxes on profit and investment tend to ​encourage businesses to invest in a country since it will help them to see a higher level of return

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