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Transcript
Mr. Barnett
University High
AP Economics

Why does the government tax
goods & services like
cigarettes, alcohol and
gambling?
 “Sin taxes”
▪ Health drawbacks from alcohol and
cigarettes are paid for by all members
of society (users and non-users)
▪ Thus, seems fair to tax individuals
using products
 Addictive – so demand is inelastic
and a tax would raise a lot of
money


Tax incidence – the manner in which the burden
of a tax is shared among participants in a market
How taxes affect market outcomes
 Unit taxes (Government requires buyers or sellers to
pay a certain dollar amount for each unit of a good
sold)
▪ Will ______ supply, Will ______demand
▪ The supply/demand curve will decrease (shift left) by the
amount of the tax

How taxes affect market outcomes cont.
 The quantity of the good sold will decline
 Buyers and sellers share the burden of the tax
▪ Do buyers and sellers like taxes? Why not?
▪ Buyers pay more for the good (b/c of added tax)
▪ Sellers receive less for the good
 Taxes discourage market activity
 Tax can be on buyers or sellers (thus, can affect supply or
demand curve)
▪ Supply curve shifted by taxes on suppliers
▪ Demand curve shifted by taxes on consumers

Partner 1: You are “Big Brother”
 Choose a good you want, who you are taxing & why you
are taxing that good
 Tell your partner what the original price was and the
amount of the tax

Partner 2: You are the supplier or consumer
 Show the shift in the supply or demand curve
 Show Prices
▪ Price without tax
▪ Price that buyers will now pay
▪ Price that sellers will now receive

Partner 1: Show the resulting graph and prices if you
switch who (buyer or supplier) got taxed
When a tax is imposed on good with inelastic demand (like cigarettes)
producers are able to pass along most of it to consumers
If the supply is more inelastic than demand, then the producer will bear a
greater burden of the tax

What is the tax burden on consumers and producers if the government passed an excise
tax on new fuel-inefficient cars that did not get 35 miles per gallon?
A new Aston Martin DB9 costs around $200,000
 Averages 13 MPG


The elasticity of demand for a new Aston Martin DB9 is 4.0 and the elasticity of supply is
0.5

Aston Martin Lagonda Limited is taxed by the government $3,000 per unit (car).



Will consumers or producers bear more of the burden from the tax?
The shift in the _______curve to the _____is equal to $_______
The consumers’ share of the tax burden is $_____
Producers share of the tax burden is $______
The new price consumers pay is $_______
The new price suppliers receive is $_________
Graph it!





Three criteria for all taxes
 Is it equitable/fair
▪ Taxes should be impartial and fair
▪ Need to avoid possible loopholes that create inequality
 Is it objective?
▪ Need to avoid possible loopholes that create inequality
▪ Is it easy to understand?
▪ Individual income tax – difficult to understand and do on your own
▪ Sales tax – easier to understand and straightforward
 Is it efficient?
▪ Easy to administer
▪ Reasonably successful at generating revenue – worthwhile

Resource Allocation: factors of production
affected when taxes are levied
 May raise costs of production, product price

Behavior Adjustment: some taxes
encourage/discourage behavior
 Ex: Sin Tax = relatively high tax designed to raise
revenue, discourage consumption of socially
undesirable product
 Ex: Homeowners use interest paid on mortgage as tax
deduction … encourages people to buy a home

Productivity &
Growth  Taxes can
change
incentives to
save, invest,
and work
 Why work
more if you’ll
be taxed more?

Incidence of Tax, or final burden of the tax =
who actually “pays” it?
 Ex: City wants to tax local utility co… utility co.
raises rates = consumer bears burden of the tax
 Is the tax fair/equitable?
1.
2.
3.
4.
FICA (Social Security) taxes
How elastic are these curves?
Designed so workers and firms share burden of the tax
How does the tax affect labor suppliers & labor demanders

Let’s recap

A tax burden falls more heavily on the side of the
market (suppliers or consumers) that is _______
elastic
 A small elasticity of demand means that buyers do
not have good alternatives
▪ No good substitute (opportunity cost)
 A small elasticity of supply means that sellers do not
have a good alternative to produce
▪ No good plan B (opportunity cost)

Go through your notes for this week and come up
with 2 quiz questions

Write down your quiz questions on scrap paper

Exchange questions with a partner and answer
each other’s questions

Discuss answers!


An ideal tax has what characteristics?
Do consumers or producers benefit from a
government tax?