introductory microeconomics es10001 topic 1: introduction to markets sales and purchase tax

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Introductory Microeconomics ES10001

Topic 1: Introduction to Markets

Sales and Purchase Tax

Sales and Purchase Taxes: Who Bears the Burden?

2

1. Introduction

• Imagine that a government wishes to raise some tax revenue

• Two schemes are being considered:

(i) Sales Tax;

(ii) Purchase Tax

1. Introduction

• Sales Tax - £t imposed on the seller of the good

• Seller responsible for forwarding tax to government

• Purchase Tax - £t imposed on the buyer of the good

• Buyer responsible for forwarding tax to government

1. Introduction

Distinguish between:

(i) Ad Valorem tax;

and

(ii) Unit tax

1. Introduction

Ad valorem tax is imposed on the value of good sold / purchased

e.g. UK VAT 17.5 %

Unit tax is imposed on quantity of good sold / purchased

Consider, for simplicity the latter

Which scheme would you, as a consumer, prefer?

To understand this, we need to examine how markets work

i.e. we need to understand demand and supply

1. Introduction

Consider unit purchase tax

Consumer liable for £t per unit purchased

Thus, imposition of tax will reduce consumer’s reservation price for the good

2. Demand

p

0 q

pd

Figure 1: (Unit) Purchase Tax

p

0 q

tax

pd

ptd

Figure 1: (Unit) Purchase Tax

p

0 10 q

pd

ptd

Figure 1: (Unit) Purchase Tax

5

3

t = £2

Consider unit sales tax

Seller liable for £t per unit purchased

Thus, imposition of tax will increase seller’s reservation price for the good

3. Supply

p

0 q

Figure 2: (Unit) Sales Tax

p

0 q

tax

Figure 9: (Unit) Sales Tax

p

0 q

Figure 9: (Unit) Sales Tax

t = £2 11

9

10

How do the two types of tax impact upon buyers and sellers?

Assume first a sales tax – i.e. a tax is imposed upon sellers per unit sold

How does this affect market equilibrium?

4. Comparison

p

0 q

Figure 10: (Unit) Sales Tax

p

0 q

t

Figure 10: (Unit) Sales Tax

Thus, a unit sales tax:

(i) Reduces the quantity traded;

(ii) Raises the equilibrium price

4. Comparison

Now, consider a unit purchase tax …

4. Comparison

p

0 q

Figure 11: (Unit) Purchase Tax

p

0 q

Figure 11: (Unit) Purchase Tax

Thus, a unit purchase tax:

(i) Reduces the quantity traded

(ii) Reduces the equilibrium price

4. Comparison

So, which alternative, as a buyer, would you prefer?

Must consider gross and net price

Unit tax drives a wedge between price paid and received

4. Comparison

Unit Sales Tax …

Seller is responsible for paying the tax

Net price seller receives is equilibrium price less tax

4. Comparison

p

0 q

t

Figure 12: (Unit) Sales Tax

p

0 q

t

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

Figure 12: (Unit) Sales Tax

Unit Purchase Tax

Buyers is responsible for tax

Net price buyer pays is equilibrium price plus tax

4. Comparison

p

0 q

Figure 13: (Unit) Purchase Tax

p

0 q

t

Figure 13: (Unit) Purchase Tax

p

0 q

t

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

Figure 13: (Unit) Purchase Tax

It can be shown that the burden of the tax does not depend upon whom it is imposed

The buyer and seller will share the burden depending upon the slopes of their demand and supply curves

These slopes affect the ability of buyers and seller to ‘pass on’ the burden of the tax to one another

4. Comparison

p

0 q

Figure 14: (Unit) Sales Tax

p

0 q

t

Figure 14: (Unit) Sales Tax

p

0 q

t

Figure 14: (Unit) Sales Tax

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

p

0 q

t

Figure 14: (Unit) Sales Tax

A

B

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

p

0 q

t

A

B

Buyer’s Burden

Seller’s Burden

Figure 14: (Unit) Sales Tax

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

p

0 q

t

Figure 14: (Unit) Purchase Tax

p

0 q

t

Figure 14: (Unit) Purchase Tax

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

p

0 q

t

C

D

Figure 14: (Unit) Purchase Tax

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

p

0 q

t

C

D

Buyer’s Burden

Figure 14: (Unit) Purchase Tax

Seller’s Burden

Thus: A + B = t = C + D

A = Buyer’s Burden = C

B = Seller’s Burden = D

The relative tax burden does not depend upon whom the tax is imposed

The buyer and seller will share the burden depending upon the slopes of their demand and supply curves

4. Comparison

Try to prove this using the following linear (normal) demand and supply equations:

Solve for the pre- and post-tax equilibria under both a sales and purchase tax and show that the relative burdens are the same

1. Comparison

It can be shown that …

… under both a unit sales tax and a unit purchase tax

4. Comparison

It can be shown, for example, that a seller is able to pass on more of the burden of a sales tax the steeper (i.e. less elastic) is the buyer’s demand curve …

4. Comparison

p

0 q

t

Figure 15: (Unit) Sales Tax

A

B

A = Buyer’s Burden

B = Seller’s Burden

p

0 q

t

A

B

A1

B1

A = Buyer’s Burden

B = Seller’s Burden

Figure 15: (Unit) Sales Tax

In the limit, if the demand curve is vertical (i.e. perfectly inelastic) then the seller is able to pass on all of the burden of a sales tax to the buyer …

4. Comparison

p

0 q

t

A

B

A = Buyer’s Burden

B = Sellers Burden

A2

Figure 15: (Unit) SalesTax

Note, vertical demand curve implies b = 0 such that:

Buyer (Seller) bears all (none) of the burden

4. Comparison

The relative burden a unit tax is determined by the relative slopes of the demand and supply curves

These slopes determine the extent to which buyers and sellers can ‘pass on’ the burden of the tax to one another

Who is legally liable for the tax is not important

4. Conclusion

Demand and supply curves – reservation price schedules of buyers and sellers

That is, the maximum (minimum) price buyers (sellers) are prepared to pay (accept)

If we know the prices that buyers (sellers) actually pay (receive), then we can derive a measure of aggregate surplus and, thus, social welfare

5. Welfare

p

q

Figure 16: Consumer Surplus (CS)

pd

0 1 2 3 4 q* = 5

p* = 2

10

8

6

4

p

q

Figure 16: Consumer Surplus (CS)

pd

0 1 2 3 4 q* = 5

p* = 2

10

8

6

4

TWP = 10 + 8 + 6 + 4 + 2 = 30p*q* = 10CS = 20

p

q 0

Figure 16: Consumer Surplus (CS)

Demand

q*

p*

Expenditure =p*q*

CS

p

q 0

Figure 17: Producer Surplus (PS)

Supply

q*

p*

PS

Revenue = p*q*

q*

p*

p

q 0

Figure 18: Social Welfare (W)

Demand

Supply

q*

p*

PS

CS

W = CS + PS

p

0 q

t

CS

PS

Figure 19: Social Welfare and Tax

Buyer Pays

Seller Receives

p

0 q

t

CS

PS

T = tq

Figure 19: Social Welfare and Tax

p

0 q

t

CS

PS

DWLT

Figure 19: Social Welfare and Tax

The relative burden of a unit tax is determined by the relative slopes of the demand and supply curves

Who is legally liable for the tax does not affect the relative burden

But, both sales and purchase unit taxes lead to the same deadweight loss in social welfare.

6. Final Comments

p

0 q

p

0 q

t

p

0 q

t

p

0 q

t

p

0 q

t

p

0 q

t

p

0 q

p

0 q

t

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