Economics 150. Public Finance: Taxation. Fall Term, 2012

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Economics 150 Public Finance: Taxation Fall Term, 2012 Professor Roger Gordon Department of Economics Office: Economics 316 Tel: 534-4848 Email: rogordon@ucsd.edu Web: http://www.econ.ucsd.edu/~rogordon Regular office hours: Thursdays 12:30 3:30 Supplementary office hours: October 16 12:30 3:30 November 12 8:30 11:30 December 10 8:30 11:30 TA: Yana Morgulis Office: Economics 125 Email: ymorgulis@ucsd.edu Regular office hours: Tuesdays 1:00 3:00 Supplementary office hours: October 17 10:00 12:00 November 9 12:00 2:00 December 10 12:00 2:00 Course Goals: The overall objective of this course is to provide an overview of the existing national tax structure in the United States, its effects on individual and firm decisions, and the resulting efficiency costs and distributional consequences. We then examine several commonly proposed tax reforms. Prerequisite: Economics 100A, or permission of the instructor Exams: There will be two in-class midterm exams, each counting for 25% of the final grade. The dates are listed below. The final exam will count for the remaining 50% of the final grade. Grading will be on a curve. The midterms can raise your numerical grade but cannot lower it: I will use the maximum of your score on the final, your weighted score using in addition either midterm, or your weighted score using in addition both midterms, to determine the final ranking. There will be no make-up exams for these midterms. If you cannot take either or both midterm exams, then your final grade will be based on those exams that you do take.

Readings: The basic readings for the course come from: Gruber: Jonathan Gruber, Public Finance and Public Policy and SB: Joel Slemrod & Jon Bakija, Taxing Ourselves (any editions) Designated chapters are from edition 3 of Gruber and edition 4 of SB. It is fine to use a different edition, but if you do you need to take into account that the chapter numbers may differ by edition. Lectures: The lectures are an integral part of the course, and will go well beyond the required readings.

Course Outline September 27, October 2: Overview of taxation, tax incidence Gruber, ch. 18.1, 19 SB, ch. 2 Williams, "Where does Federal Tax Revenue Come From?" Marion, Fuel Tax Incidence and Supply Conditions October 4: Efficiency costs of taxes Gruber, ch. 20.1 October 9: Equity considerations Gruber ch. 18.3,18.6 SB, ch. 3 October 11: Trade-off Gruber, ch. 20.2-3 October 16: Other considerations in tax policy SB, ch. 4-5 Gruber, pp. 739-43, (pp. 726-32 in Ed. 2 and pp. 691-5 in Ed. 1) Slemrod, "Cheating Ourselves: The Economics of Tax Evasion" October 16: Review session at 7:00 PM in Center 216 October 18: Midterm exam October 23: Personal income tax, overview Gruber, ch. 18.2, 18.4 Piketty-Saez, "How Progressive is the Federal Tax System?" Burman et al, "The Expanding Reach of the Individual Alternative Minimum Tax" Alm et al, "The Marriage Penalty" October 25, 30: Effects on labor supply (2 classes) Gruber, ch. 21 Kotlikoff et al, "Does it Pay, at the Margin, to Work and Save?"

November 1, 6: Effects on savings behavior and portfolio choice (2 classes) Gruber, ch. 22.1-3, 23.1-2 Stiglitz, The General Theory of Tax Avoidance," National Tax Journal, 1985, pp. 325-37. November 8: Deductible items Gruber, ch. 18.5 Clotfelter, The Impact of Tax Reform on Charitable Giving: A 1989 Perspective, NBER Working Paper No. 3273. Cogan et al, "Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise," Wall Street Journal, May 4, 2004. Gale et al, "Encouraging Home Ownership through the Tax Code" SB, pp. 216-30 (pp. 217-31 in Ed. 3 and pp. 184-97 in Ed. 2) Report of the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform, "Policy Recommendations", pp. 70-82. November 8: Review session at 7:00 PM in Center 216 November 13: Midterm exam November 15, 20: Corporate income tax: Gruber, ch. 24 Toder-Koch, "Fewer Businesses are Organized as Taxable Corporations" Brill, "Corporate Tax Rates, Receipts, and Distortions" November 27: Estate tax Gruber, ch. 23.3 Burman et al., "Options for Reforming the Estate Tax" November 29: Debt finance Gruber, ch. 4 Auerbach et al, "Generational Accounting" Shapiro-Slemrod, "Consumer Response to Tax Rebate" Burman, "Dynamic Analysis and Scoring" December 4, 6: Possible tax reforms Gruber 25.3-4 SB, pp. 189-216 (pp. 165-84 in Ed. 2), ch. 7 Gale, "Flat Tax"

Auerbach, "The Choice Between Income Taxes and Consumption Taxes: A Primer," pp. 1-18. Sheffrin, "Should the Federal Income Tax be Replaced with a National Sales or Value-Added Tax?" Report of the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform, "Policy Recommendations" Tax by Design: The Mirrlees Review, chapter 20 December 9: review session at 7:00 PM in Center 105 December 11: Final exam, 8:00-11:00