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Interactive Graphs
Graphing Exercise: Tax Incidence
Many goods and services
are subject to an excise tax. Such a tax is usually levied on the producers,
who properly view it as an increase in their marginal cost. However, it is often
incorrect to assert that producers pay the tax, as the tax may be shifted onto
consumers in the form of higher prices. The incidence of the tax is a measure
of the ultimate resting place of the tax and depends on the elasticities of
supply and demand.
Exploration:
How does an excise tax affect equilibrium price and quantity?
The graph illustrates the
market for an inexpensive domestic wine, which may become subject to an excise
tax. Prior to the tax, the price is $4.00 per bottle and 15 million bottles
are sold each month. To use the graph, click anywhere inside the box labeled
Excise Tax and enter an amount up to $2.00. The graph illustrates the
after-tax price paid by consumers, the amount of total tax revenue collected
(and its split between buyers and sellers), and any efficiency loss created
by the tax. By dragging the D and S labels you can change the
elasticities of demand and supply, respectively. Click Reset to start
over.
- What is the incidence
of a $1 tax per bottle in this market?
answer
- Government revenue analysts
observe that prior to a tax on wine, 15 million units are sold each month.
They estimates that a $1 excise tax will earn $15 million tax revenue. Will
their estimates be correct? Why?
answer
- How will an increase
in the elasticities of demand or supply affect the government’s tax revenue?
answer
- How is the incidence
of a tax affected by the elasticities of supply and demand?
answer
- Is there any combination
of supply and demand elasticities that would allow sellers to shift the entire
tax burden onto consumers?
answer
- Experiment on your own.
How is the size of the efficiency loss of the tax affected by the amount of
the tax and the elasticities of supply and demand?
answer
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