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Optimal Tax Policy and the Symmetries of IgnoranceChris William SanchiricoUniversity of Pennsylvania Law School; University of Pennsylvania Wharton School - Business Economics and Public Policy Department; Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center 2012 Tax Law Review, Vol. 66, p. 1, 2012 University of Pennsylvania, Institute for Law & Economic Research Paper No. 11-19 U of Penn Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 11-21 Abstract: What government-observable characteristics should determine the taxes that an individual pays and/or the transfers that she receives? This article focuses on a specific aspect of this fundamental question of tax policy: the implications of policymakers’ uncertainty regarding the outcomes of tax policy choices. The article identifies and questions two implicit premises in policy-uncertainty-based arguments against including taxable attributes other than labor earnings in the base. The first is that greater uncertainty surrounds the optimal taxation of non-labor-earnings attributes than surrounds the optimal taxation of labor earnings. The second is that tax policymakers ought to follow a kind of precautionary principle under which uncertainty regarding an attribute counsels base exclusion. The article explains why both premises are flawed. The appendices for this paper are available at the following URL: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1967548
Number of Pages in PDF File: 62 Keywords: Consumption Taxation, Income Taxation, Taxation of Capital Earnings, Inheritance Taxation, Redistributional Legal Rules, Optimal Taxation, Optimal Income Taxation, Optimal Redistribution, Policy Uncertainty JEL Classification: H2, H21, H22, H23, H4, K00, K1, K34 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: June 3, 2011 ; Last revised: May 23, 2013Suggested CitationContact Information
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