Distributional Implications of Introducing a Broad-Based Consumption Tax

64 Pages Posted: 27 Jun 2000 Last revised: 10 Dec 2022

See all articles by William M. Gentry

William M. Gentry

Williams College - Department of Economics

R. Glenn Hubbard

Columbia University - Columbia Business School, Finance; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Date Written: November 1996

Abstract

As a tax base, 'consumption' is sometimes argued to be less fair than 'income' because the benefits of not taxing capital income accrue to high-income households. We argue that, despite the common perception that consumption taxation eliminates all taxes on capital income, consumption and income taxes actually treat similarly much of what is commonly called capital income. Indeed, relative to an income tax, a consumption tax exempts only the tax on the opportunity cost of capital. In contrast to a pure income tax, a consumption tax replaces capital depreciation with capital expensing. This change eliminates the tax on the opportunity cost of capital, but does not change, relative to the income tax, the tax treatment of capital income arising from a risk premium, inframarginal profit, or luck. Because these components of capital income are more heavily skewed toward the top of the distribution of economic well-being, a consumption tax is more progressive than would be estimated under conventional distributional assumptions. We prepare distribution tables and demonstrate that this modification is quantitatively important.

Suggested Citation

Gentry, William M. and Hubbard, Robert Glenn, Distributional Implications of Introducing a Broad-Based Consumption Tax (November 1996). NBER Working Paper No. w5832, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=225618

William M. Gentry (Contact Author)

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Robert Glenn Hubbard

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