Substitution and Income Effects of Lump-Sum Income at the Aggregate Level: The Effective Budget Constraint of the Government and the Flypaper Effect

20 Pages Posted: 20 Nov 2012 Last revised: 7 Dec 2012

Date Written: November 20, 2012

Abstract

This paper analyzes the effect of a change in lump-sum (private) income on the tax and expenditure decisions of a government constrained by taxpayers’ behavioral responses to the tax policy. Changes in lump-sum income are generally characterized as pure income effects on taxpayers’ behavior, and considered by normative public finance theory as imposing no price effects on the economy. In this paper we show that pure income effects at the individual level can lead to three distinguishable effects at the aggregate level. The reason is that a change in lump-sum income affects taxpayers’ behavioral responses to taxation and the size of the tax bases, altering the marginal cost of tax collections. The optimal fiscal responses of a welfare maximizing government can be broken up into a “net substitution effect,” associated with a change in the marginal cost of public funds, a “private income effect,” associated with the increase in private consumption, and a “public income effect,” which is equivalent to the effect of intergovernmental transfers. As a consequence, the effects of lump-sum income and intergovernmental transfers on fiscal decisions are shown to be generally different, but consistent with empirical findings of the literature on the flypaper effect.

Keywords: flypaper effect, income and substitution effects, marginal cost of public funds, intergovernmental transfers

JEL Classification: D78, H71, H77

Suggested Citation

Sepulveda, Cristian F., Substitution and Income Effects of Lump-Sum Income at the Aggregate Level: The Effective Budget Constraint of the Government and the Flypaper Effect (November 20, 2012). Andrew Young School of Policy Studies Research Paper Series No. 12-29, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2178717 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2178717

Cristian F. Sepulveda (Contact Author)

Farmingdale State College, SUNY ( email )

School of Busines
Farmingdale, NY 11735

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