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Commodity Taxes

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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    - [Tyler] Today we begin
    the first of several talks
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    on taxes and subsidies.
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    We're not going to be talking
    about income taxes
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    and income subsidies.
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    Those are typically topics
    for macroeconomics.
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    Instead, we'll be talking
    about taxes and subsidies on goods,
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    like a sales tax
    or a subsidy for wheat.
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    These are also called
    commodity taxes and subsidies.
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    So let's get going.
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    We're going to be emphasizing
    three important ideas
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    about commodity taxation.
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    First, who pays the tax
    does not depend
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    on who writes the check
    to the government.
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    For example, suppose the government
    is taxing apples.
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    The government could make
    the buyer of apples
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    pay for each apple that they buy.
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    Or they could require the sellers
    of the apples pay for each apple
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    that they sell.
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    What we're going to show is that,
    from the point of view
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    of the buyers or sellers,
    it actually doesn't matter
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    how the tax is placed.
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    The actual outcomes
    are going to be identical.
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    Another way of putting this
    is that the economic incidence
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    of the tax, who actually pays
    the tax, does not depend
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    on the legal incidence,
    who is in law required to write
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    the check to the government.
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    This will become a little bit
    clearer as we go along.
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    Don't worry about it
    if it's not clear yet.
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    The second key point,
    who pays the tax
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    does depend on the relative
    elasticities of demand and supply.
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    In fact, we can summarize
    point one and point two by saying,
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    who pays the tax depends not
    on the laws of congress
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    but rather on the laws
    of supply and demand.
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    The third point
    is that commodity taxation
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    raises revenue,
    but it also takes away
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    some gains from trade, that is,
    it creates deadweight loss.
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    We're going to be looking
    at point one in this talk,
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    and then we'll move on
    to point two, and point three
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    in later talks.
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    So, let's start with point one.
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    Let's begin our analysis
    of commodity taxation
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    by assuming the suppliers
    are the one who have to send
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    the check to the government.
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    That is, the legal incidence
    of the tax falls on the suppliers.
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    What does a tax
    on the suppliers do?
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    We can think about a tax
    on suppliers
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    as increasing their costs.
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    This is going to shift
    the supply curve up
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    by the amount of the tax,
    so the supply curve
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    shifts up like this.
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    Another way of thinking
    about this, is to remember
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    that the supply curve tells us
    the minimum amount
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    which suppliers require to offer
    a given quantity
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    in the marketplace.
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    The tax, that is going to increase
    the minimum amount that suppliers
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    are requiring to offer
    that quantity in the marketplace.
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    It shifts up that minimum amount
    required by just the amount
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    of the tax.
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    With the new supply curve
    we find the new equilibrium.
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    The market equilibrium
    moves from point A to point B.
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    What we see is that of course,
    the quantity which is exchanged
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    goes down, in addition,
    the price paid
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    by the buyers goes up.
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    How much do the suppliers get?
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    The suppliers collect this amount,
    the price paid by the buyers,
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    but now they have to give
    a certain amount of that,
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    the tax to the government.
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    The suppliers end up receiving
    this amount after tax, right here.
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    In other words, what the tax does,
    it means that the buyers
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    pay more than before,
    and the sellers receive
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    less than before.
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    Without any tax,
    the price the buyers pay
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    is the same as the price
    the supplier receives.
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    With the tax,
    the buyers pay a certain price,
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    but the sellers get less than that.
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    They get whatever the buyers pay
    minus of course, the tax.
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    That's the situation
    when the suppliers pay the tax,
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    or the suppliers have to send
    the check to the government.
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    Let's now look at what happens
    when it's the buyers
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    who must send the check
    to the government.
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    Now, we look at the situation
    when the legal incidence
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    is on the buyers.
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    We begin just as before
    with the equilibrium with no taxes.
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    No taxes on sellers or buyers.
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    Again, that equilibrium
    is at point A.
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    I've also included
    this supply curve here.
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    This is the supply curve
    when the tax is on the suppliers.
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    It's the supply curve
    from the previous problem.
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    It's not relevant for this problem.
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    I've included it rather
    to remind us of where
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    the equilibrium
    on the previous problem was.
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    You can think of this
    as a kind of ghost supply curve.
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    It's a supply curve
    from the previous problem
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    coming back to haunt us.
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    So what's the effect
    of a tax on the demanders?
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    Think about it this way.
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    Suppose the most you were willing
    to pay for an apple is $1.
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    Again, most you're willing to pay
    for that apple, a dollar, no more.
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    Now, suppose you learned
    that the government has instituted
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    a new tax.
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    For every apple you buy,
    you must now pay 25 cents
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    to the government.
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    Now, how much
    are you willing to pay
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    to suppliers for that apple?
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    You're only willing to pay
    the maximum amount
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    that you're going to be willing
    to pay suppliers
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    is now 75 cents.
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    The maximum amount
    that apple was worth to you
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    is a dollar.
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    If you know you're going
    to be taxed 25 cents
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    if you buy that apple,
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    then the most you're going
    to be willing to pay the supplier
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    is 75 cents, because 75 cents
    plus the 25 cent tax
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    to the government, that's $1.
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    That's the most you're willing
    to pay to get the apple.
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    In other words, what a tax
    on demanders does
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    is it reduces
    their willingness to pay,
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    and that means
    the demand curve shifts.
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    Which way? The demand curve shifts
    down by the amount of the tax.
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    So let's shift.
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    The tax is exactly
    the same amount that it was before.
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    Let's shift the demand curve
    down by the amount of the tax.
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    We find now
    that the new equilibrium
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    is at point B.
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    Notice first of all,
    that the quantity has declined.
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    The quantity exchange has declined
    by exactly the same amount
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    as before in the previous problem.
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    What about the price
    received by the sellers?
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    The sellers now receive this price.
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    Lo and behold,
    that's exactly the same price
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    as it was before.
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    How about the price
    paid by the buyers?
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    The buyers now pay
    what they paid to the suppliers,
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    plus they must pay the tax
    to the government.
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    This distance is the tax.
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    Lo and behold, the price after tax
    paid by the buyers
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    is once again exactly
    what it was when the tax
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    was on the suppliers.
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    When the tax is on the buyers,
    the buyers pay more than before.
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    The sellers receive less
    than before
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    by exactly the same amounts.
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    The quantity declines
    by the same amount, too.
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    The net price,
    or the total price paid
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    by the buyers is the same.
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    The total price received
    by the sellers is the same.
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    Now that you know the idea,
    I'm going to show you a simpler way
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    of demonstrating this.
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    What we just showed
    is that it doesn't matter
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    whether the suppliers
    must write the check
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    to the government, or the demanders
    must write the check
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    to the government
    in order to pay the tax.
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    In other words,
    we can analyze the tax
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    by shifting the supply curve up,
    or by shifting
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    the demand curve down.
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    As long as we analyze
    the same size tax,
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    we're going to get
    equivalent outcomes.
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    It's going to come out the same
    whichever choice of tax we make.
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    There's actually a simpler way
    of thinking about this.
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    What we can think
    about such a tax is doing,
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    is driving a wedge
    between what the buyer is paying
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    and what the sellers receive.
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    When there's no tax,
    what the buyers pay
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    is what the sellers receive,
    but when there's a tax,
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    the buyers pay more
    than what the sellers receive.
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    The difference
    is what the government gets.
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    The difference
    is the amount of the tax.
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    So let's think about this
    as a tax wedge.
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    Let's say this tax wedge,
    this side is, let's say a dollar.
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    Another way of analyzing
    the tax is to drive this wedge
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    into the diagram
    until the top of the wedge
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    hits the demand curve,
    and the bottom of the wedge
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    just touches the supply curve.
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    Let's take a look.
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    I'm going to drive the wedge in.
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    What this tells us
    is that the price the buyer pays
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    will be here, point B.
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    The price the suppliers receive
    will be point D.
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    The difference is the tax.
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    For instance, if the buyers
    end up paying $2.65,
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    then the sellers must receive $1.65
    if the tax is a dollar.
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    Similarly, if the suppliers receive
    a $1.65 and the tax is a dollar,
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    the buyers must be paying $2.65.
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    With this wedge, we could read
    off the diagram
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    the price the buyer pays,
    the price the seller receives,
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    and the quantity exchanged.
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    We don't even have
    to shift any curves.
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    We just drive the wedge
    into this diagram.
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    Let's do an application.
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    In the United States,
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    under the Federal Insurance
    Contributions Act -- FICA --
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    12.4% of earned income
    up to an annual limit
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    must be paid into social security,
    and 2.9%, an additional 2.9%
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    must be paid into Medicare.
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    Half of this amount comes directly
    from the employee.
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    You can see it
    on your own paychecks.
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    This is the FICA tax,
    and half the amount comes
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    from the employer.
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    The question is, does the fact
    that it's a 50/50 split,
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    does this make a difference?
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    Does this mean for example,
    that since the employer
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    is paying half that this is necessarily
    a good deal for the employee?
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    No, it doesn't mean that.
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    What we now know
    is that we could have 100%
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    of this tax paid by the employee,
    or we could have 100%
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    of this tax paid by the employer.
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    This wouldn't make a difference,
    not to wages, not to prices,
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    not to anything.
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    It would change
    the legal incidence of the tax,
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    but it would not change
    the final economic incidence.
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    I haven't said here
    who actually pays the tax.
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    That's what we're going
    to be talking about
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    in the next lecture.
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    What I've said here
    is that it doesn't matter
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    who pays the tax
    from a legal point-of-view
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    of who is obliged
    to deliver that money.
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    So the legal incidence again,
    does not have a bearing
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    on the economic incidence
    of the tax.
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    What we're going to talk
    about in the next lecture
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    is what does determine
    the economic incidence of a tax.
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    It turns out to be elasticities
    of supply and demand,
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    and that's what we'll take up
    in the next lecture.
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    Thanks again for listening.
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    - [Narrator] If you want
    to test yourself,
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    click "Practice Questions."
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    Or if you're ready to move on,
    just click "Next Video."
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    ♪ [music] ♪
Title:
Commodity Taxes
Description:

In this video we cover taxes and tax revenue and subsidies on goods. We discuss commodity taxes, including who pays the tax and lost gains from trade, also called deadweight loss. We’ll take a look at the tax wedge and apply what we learn to the example of Social Security taxes.

Microeconomics Course: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics

Ask a question about the video: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics/taxes-subsidies-definition-tax-wedge#QandA

Next video: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics/tax-burden-elasticity-affordable-care-act-health-insurance-mandate

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Project:
Micro
Duration:
10:31
Martel Espiritu edited English subtitles for Commodity Taxes
Martel Espiritu edited English subtitles for Commodity Taxes
Martel Espiritu edited English subtitles for Commodity Taxes
MRU2 edited English subtitles for Commodity Taxes
MRU2 edited English subtitles for Commodity Taxes

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