Home
Scholarly Works
Tax and subsidy incidence equivalence theories:...
Journal article

Tax and subsidy incidence equivalence theories: experimental evidence from competitive markets

Abstract

A basic tenet in microeconomics is tax incidence equivalence, which holds that the burden of a unit tax on buyers and sellers is independent of who actually pays the tax. By contrast, policymakers and the public often mistake statutory incidence for economic incidence. Using competitive laboratory markets, I test both tax incidence equivalence and an analogous theorem for subsidies. For sufficiently large markets, the results show strong support for both theories; there is little to no evidence, even in the short run, of the popular misperception that statutory incidence equals economic incidence. In smaller markets in which competitive forces are weaker and relative bargaining strengths may play a role, the evidence for tax incidence equivalence is weaker as minor price discrepancies may persist between markets.

Authors

Ruffle BJ

Journal

Journal of Public Economics, Vol. 89, No. 8, pp. 1519–1542

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2005

DOI

10.1016/j.jpubeco.2004.04.009

ISSN

0047-2727

Contact the Experts team