Home
Scholarly Works
Are Income and Consumption Taxes Ever Really...
Preprint

Are Income and Consumption Taxes Ever Really Equivalent? Evidence from a Real-Effort Experiment with Real Goods

Abstract

The public finance literature demonstrates the equivalence between consumption and labor-income (wage) taxes. We introduce an experimental paradigm in which individuals make real labor-leisure choices and spend their earned income on real goods. We use this paradigm to test whether a labor-income tax and an equivalent consumption tax lead to identical labor-leisure allocations. Despite controlling for subjects' work ability and inherent labor-leisure preferences and disallowing saving, subjects reduce their labor supply significantly more in response to an income tax than to an equivalent consumption tax. We discuss the economic implications of a policy shift to a consumption tax.

Authors

Blumkin T; Ruffle BJ; Ganun Y

Publication date

January 1, 2010

DOI

10.2139/ssrn.1667769

Preprint server

SSRN Electronic Journal
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team