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Taxing Humans: Pitfalls of the Mechanism Design Approach and Potential Resolutions / Alex Rees-Jones, Dmitry Taubinsky.

NBER Working papers Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Rees-Jones, Alex.
Contributor:
National Bureau of Economic Research.
Taubinsky, Dmitry.
Series:
Working Paper Series (National Bureau of Economic Research) no. w23980.
NBER working paper series no. w23980
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource: illustrations (black and white);
Other Title:
Taxing Humans
Place of Publication:
Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 2017.
Summary:
A growing body of evidence suggests that psychological biases can lead different implementations of otherwise equivalent tax incentives to result in meaningfully different behaviors. We argue that in the presence of such failures of "implementation invariance," decoupling the question of optimal feasible allocations from the tax system used to induce them--the "mechanism design approach" to tax analysis--cannot be the right approach to analyzing optimal tax systems. After reviewing the diverse psychologies that lead to failures of implementation invariance, we illustrate our argument by formally deriving three basic lessons that arise in the presence of these biases. First, the mechanism design approach neither estimates nor bounds the welfare computed under psychologically realistic assumptions about individuals' responses to the tax instruments used in practice. Second, the optimal allocations from abstract mechanisms may not be implementable with concrete tax policies, and vice-versa. Third, the integration of these biases may mitigate the importance of information asymmetries, resulting in optimal tax formulas more closely approximated by classical Ramsey results. We conclude by proposing that a "behavioral" extension of the "sufficient statistics" approach is a more fruitful way forward in the presence of such psychological biases.
Notes:
Print version record
October 2017.

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