University of Leicester
Browse

Optimal income taxation in the presence of tax evasion: Expected utility versus prospect theory

Download (346.14 kB)
report
posted on 2010-02-04, 11:51 authored by Sanjit Dhami, Ali al-Nowaihi
The predictions of expected utility theory (EUT) applied to tax evasion are awed on two counts: (i) They are quantitatively in error by huge orders of mag- nitude. (ii) Higher taxation is predicted to lower evasion, which is at variance with the evidence. An emerging literature in behavioral economics, most notably based on prospect theory (PT), has shown that behavioral economics is much better at explaining tax evasion. We extend this literature to incorporate issues of optimal taxation. As a benchmark for a successful theory, we require that it should explain, jointly, the facts on the tax rate, tax gap and the level of government expenditure. We nd that when taxpayers use EUT (respectively, PT) and the optimal tax is de- rived from a social welfare function that also uses EUT (respectively, PT), then, the calibration results are completely at odds with the facts. However, when taxpayers use PT but the social welfare function uses standard EUT, there is a very close match between the predictions and the facts. This has important implications for context dependent preferences but also for the newly emerging literature on liberalism versus paternalism in behavioral economics.

History

Publisher

Dept. of Economics, University of Leicester

Available date

2010-02-04

Publisher version

http://www.le.ac.uk/economics/research/discussion/papers2007.html

Book series

Papers in Economics;07/10

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC