Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-11T05:45:22.687Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A UNIFIED FRAMEWORK FOR OPTIMAL TAXATION WITH UNDIVERSIFIABLE RISK

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 September 2019

Vasia Panousi
Affiliation:
University of Montreal
Catarina Reis*
Affiliation:
Católica Lisbon School of Business & Economics
*
Address correspondence to: Catarina Reis, CATOLICA-LISBON School of Business and Economics, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Palma de Cima, 1649-023 Lisboa, Portugal. e-mail: creis@ucp.pt. Phone: +351 965 863 097.

Abstract

This paper considers a model of linear capital taxation for an economy where capital and labor income are subject to idiosyncratic uninsurable risk. To keep the model tractable, we assume that investment decisions are made before uncertainty is realized, so that the realization of the capital and labor income shocks only affects current consumption. In this setting, we are able to jointly analyze capital and labor income risk and derive analytical results regarding the optimal taxation of capital. We find that the optimal capital tax is positive in the long run if there is only capital income risk. The reason for this is that the capital tax provides insurance against capital income risk. Furthermore, for high levels of risk, increasing the capital tax may actually induce capital accumulation. On the other hand, if there is only labor income risk, the optimal capital tax is zero. The sign of the optimal tax can only be negative if the two types of risk are negatively correlated and labor income risk is large enough.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

A previous version of this paper with only capital income risk was circulated with the title “Optimal taxation with idiosyncratic capital income risk.” We are grateful to Isabel Correia, Mikhail Golosov, Leonor Modesto, Pedro Teles, Ivan Werning, Dirk Krueger, and Daniel Belchior for helpful comments. We would also like to thank seminar and conference participants at Vanderbuilt University, The SAET Meeting in 2011, the SED meeting in 2016, and the PET meeting in 2017. Financial support from the ADEMU (H2020, No 649396) project and Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia is gratefully acknowledged.

References

REFERENCES

Aiyagari, S. R. (1994) Uninsured idiosyncratic risk and aggregate saving. Quarterly Journal of Economics 109, 659684.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aiyagari, S. R. (1995) Optimal capital income taxation with incomplete markets, borrowing constraints, and constant discounting. Journal of Political Economy 103, 11581175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Angeletos, G.-M. (2007) Uninsured idiosyncratic investment risk and aggregate saving. Review of Economic Dynamics 10, 130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Angeletos, G.-M. and Panousi, V. (2009) Revisiting the supply side effects of government spending. Journal of Monetary Economics 56(2), 137153.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chamley, C. (1986) Optimal taxation of capital income in general equilibrium with infinite lives. Econometrica 54, 607622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Correia, I. (1996) Should capital income be taxed in the steady state? Journal of Public Economics 60, 147151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeBonis, V. and Spataro, L. (2005) Taxing capital income as Pigouvian correction: The role of discounting the future. Macroeconomic Dynamics 9(4), 469477.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frankel, D. (1998) Transitional dynamics of optimal capital taxation. Macroeconomic Dynamics 2(4), 492503.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gervais, M. and Mennuni, A. (2015) Optimal fiscal policy in the neoclassical growth model revisited. European Economic Review 73, 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krueger, D. and Ludwig, A. (2018) Precautionary Savings and Pecuniary Externalities: Optimal Taxes on Capital in the OLG Model with Idiosyncratic Income Risk. SAFE Working Papers: No. 201.Google Scholar
Panousi, V. (2015) Capital Taxation with Entrepreneurial Risk. Working Paper.Google Scholar
Panousi, V. and Reis, C. (2016) Optimal Capital Taxation with Idiosyncratic Investment Risk. Working Paper.Google Scholar
Reis, C. (2011) Entrepreneurial labor and capital taxation. Macroeconomic Dynamics 15(3), 326335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stockman, D. (2001) Balanced-budget rules: Welfare loss and optimal policies. Review of Economic Dynamics 4, 438459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar