Commodity Taxes
Commodity Taxes
commodity taxes: taxes on goods
- ex: taxes on cigarettes, fuel, alcohol
truths about commodity taxation:
- who pays the tax doesn’t depend on who writes the check to the government
- who pays the tax doesn’t depend on the relative elasticities of demand and supply
- commodity taxation raises revenue and creates deadweight loss (reduces the gains from trade)
Who Ultimately Pays the Tax Doesn’t Depend On Who Writes the Check
ex:
the government wants to place a tax on apples
they can do it in two ways:
- can tax apple sellers $1 for every basket supplied
- can tax apple buyers $1 for every basket bought
the tax has the same benefit on buyers either way
- who pays a tax is determined by the laws of supply and demand
consider the effect of a $1 tax on sellers
- as far as sellers are concerned, a tax is the same as an increase in cost
- ex: if with no tax, sellers require a minimum of $1 per basket to sell 250 baskets of apples, then with a $1 tax, they will require $2 per basket to sell the same quantity
- a $1 tax shifts the supply curve up at every quantity by 1
the tax = price paid by buyers - price received by sellers
what happens if instead of taxing sellers, the government taxes buyers?
- ex: before the tax, buyers were willing to pay up to $4 per basket but they must pay a tax of $1 to the government.
- the most buyers will be willing to pay now is $3 because they valued the apples at $4, and now there is a $1 tax
- tax of $1 on buyers shifts the demand curve down at every quantity by $1