The Choice Between Income and Consumption Taxes: A Primer

NBER Working Paper No. 12307

Issued in June 2006

NBER Program(s):Public Economics



It has now been nearly three decades since the publication of two important volumes that laid out many of the details of how one might implement a progressive consumption tax (Institute for Fiscal Studies, 1978; U.S. Treasury, 1977). Over the years since, many contributions have analyzed the mechanics of the different variants of consumption taxation, the potential efficiency and distributional effects of their adoption, the issues of administration and transition from the current tax system, and the problems relating to certain types of transactions. But much of what we “know” is not part of the general policy discussion and there are important issues that the literature has recognized but still not resolved. The aim of this paper is to lay out the key economic issues involved in deciding whether and how to adopt a consumption tax and to discuss what theory and evidence have told us and could tell us about these issues.

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Document Object Identifier (DOI): 10.3386/w12307

Published: Auerbach. A. and D. Shaviro (eds.) Institutional Foundations of Public Finance: Economic and Legal Perspectives. Harvard University Press, 2009.

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