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Distributional Analysis of Tax Policy: Theory and Practice

Distributional Analysis of Tax Policy: Theory and Practice. Joseph Rosenberg Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center February 20, 2014. Distributional Analysis of Tax Policy. Measuring the impact of tax laws and tax policy changes on individuals. - Motivation? - Concerns?

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Distributional Analysis of Tax Policy: Theory and Practice

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  1. Distributional Analysis of Tax Policy: Theory and Practice Joseph Rosenberg Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center February 20, 2014

  2. Distributional Analysis of Tax Policy Measuring the impact of tax laws and tax policy changes on individuals. - Motivation? - Concerns? Distributional analysis at the federal level is routinely produced by: Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT), U.S. Treasury’s Department of Tax Analysis (OTA), Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center (TPC)

  3. Distributional Analysis: Overview • Unit of analysis Tax unit; Family; Household • Time period Single year; Multiyear; Lifetime • Ranking individuals Income; Consumption Definition of income Adjustments for size of unit • Measuring tax burden Taxes paid; Burden • Incidence assumptions How should we assign tax burdens back to individuals

  4. Distributional Analysis: Comparison

  5. Common Incidence Assumptions • Individual Income Tax: Borne by individual taxpayer • Payroll Tax: Employer & employee portions borne by employee • Estate Tax: Borne by decedent • Corporate Income Tax: It’s complicated CBO & JCT*: 75% Capital, 25% Labor OTA: 63% Shareholders, 18% Capital, 18% Labor TPC: 60% Shareholders, 20% Capital, 20% Labor • Consumption/Excise Tax: It’s really complicated e.g., Toder, Nunns, Rosenberg (2011)

  6. JCT Distribution Table, 2012

  7. TPC Distribution Table, 2013

  8. TPC Distribution Table, 2013

  9. TPC: Distributional Impact of ATRA

  10. CBO, 1979-2010

  11. Measuring Income for Distributional Analysis • Ranking taxpayers Standard distributional tables rank taxpayers based on annual income as a proxy for their economic status and ability to pay taxes. • Measuring tax burdens The overall burden of the tax system (excluding indirect economic costs) can be summarized in the effective tax rate (ETR), the amount of taxes paid measured as a percentage of income. • Evaluating the effects of tax policy changes Changes in taxes are often shown as a percentage of pre-tax income or as a percentage change in after-tax income.

  12. Measuring Income for Distributional Analysis (cont.) Haig-Simons Income: Consumption + Change in Net Wealth Practical Difficulties: Administrative (e.g., accrued capital gains) Timing (e.g., retirement income) Imputed Rent! Relative to narrow income measures (e.g., AGI), broad income measures provide a more accurate ranking of taxpayers and better estimates of the burden of the tax system and tax policy changes.

  13. Conceptual Issues in Measuring Income • Transfer Payments • Cash transfers • In-kind transfers • Timing of Retirement Income • Defined benefit • Defined contribution • Front-loaded • Back-loaded • Corporate Income Tax • Data Quality • Administrative vs. Imputed Data

  14. Comparison of Different Income Measures

  15. Distribution of Sources of ECI

  16. Distributional Analysis in Practice: Example “Who Benefits from Tax-Exempt Bonds?: An Application of the Theory of Tax Incidence” (with Harvey Galper, Kim Rueben, and Eric Toder) Motivation: Often claimed… • “Tax-exemption only benefits holders of tax-exempt bonds” • “80% of the benefit accrues to state & local governments in the form of lower financing costs”

  17. Tax Incidence: General Principles General Principles: • Economic burdens may differ from statutory burdens • Tax burdens ultimately borne by individuals • Individuals are affected according to how they earn the income (“sources-side”) and how they spend their income (“uses-side”) Sources-side: Taxes reduce after-tax incomes depending on the size and composition of an individual’s income Uses-side: Taxes affect relative prices and can reallocate resources across goods and/or sectors of the economy

  18. Incidence of Muni Tax Exemption: Theory Current Method: Allocate benefit in proportion to reported tax-exempt interest Sources-side: Creates implicit taxes and subsidies in pre-tax incomes, spread across… • all interest income • all capital income • capital and labor income Uses-side: Net transfer to S&L governments from other sectors • lower S&L taxes (to whom?), or • higher S&L spending (for what?)

  19. Capital Market Effects of Tax Exemption • In theory, the yield spread between tax-exempt debt and similar taxable debt should proxy for the value of tax exemption. • Literature on BABs finds a range of yield spreads, but generally centered around 25% Important Stylized Fact: Tax-exempt interest reported across a wide range of incomes and marginal tax brackets, casting doubt on pure clientele or “marginal investor” model of capital market equilibrium. We refer to the empirical yield spread as the “implied equilibrating tax rate.”

  20. Model Simulations: Methodology Sources-side: • Using implied yield spread, we calculate an “adjusted” measure of pre-tax income by grossing up tax-exempt interest and then adjusting down relevant income sources in order to hold aggregate pre-tax income constant. Uses-side: Zero-sum reallocation among… • Positive reallocation to state & local governments • Case 1: Lower taxes distributed in proportion to MAGI • Case 2: Higher spending distributed per capita • Negative reallocation to other sectors • Distributed in proportion to private consumption by income group3

  21. Simulations: Main Findings Overall, majority of the benefit from exemption accrues to top 5%. However: • Relative to conventional methodology, “sources-side” effects spread the benefit more broadly across income distribution • Benefits spread to holders of taxable securities • But benefit still goes disproportionately to top 5 percent • Uses-side effects can be large for the bottom quintile • They either benefit more from increased S&L provided goods & services or less from S&L tax cuts, than the harm to them from higher relative prices on consumption goods

  22. Simulations: Results

  23. Advances in Distributional Analysis Where to go from here: • Better data sources • Incorporating state/local taxes • Distribution of federal taxes by state • Distribution of state income taxes • Integrating taxes and transfer/spending programs (e.g., CBO, 2013)

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