Description
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- About this Book
- Cover Page
- Half Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- About the Authors
- Brief Contents
- Contents
- From the Author
- What’s New in this Edition
- Presentation and Pedagogy
- Instructor Resources
- Acknowledgments
- Accessibility
- Chapter 1: Why Study Public Finance?
- 1.1 The Four Questions of Public Finance
- When Should the Government Intervene in the Economy?
- How Might the Government Intervene?
- What Is the Effect of Those Interventions on Economic Outcomes?
- Why Do Governments Choose to Intervene in the Way That They Do?
- 1.2 Why Study Public Finance? Facts on Government in the United States and Around the World
- The Size and Growth of Government
- Decentralization
- Spending, Taxes, Deficits, and Debts
- Distribution of Spending
- Distribution of Spending
- Regulatory Role of the Government
- 1.3 The Questions of Public Finance Are Front and Center During Covid-19
- When Should the Government Intervene?
- How Should the Government Intervene?
- What Are the Effects of Interventions?
- Why Governments Do What They Do
- 1.4 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 2: Theoretical Tools of Public Finance
- 2.1 Constrained Utility Maximization
- Preferences and Indifference Curves
- Utility Mapping of Preferences
- Budget Constraints
- Putting It All Together: Constrained Choice
- The Effects of Price Changes: Substitution and Income Effects
- 2.2 Putting the Tools to Work: TANF and Labor Supply Among Single Parents
- Identifying the Budget Constraint
- The Effect of TANF on the Budget Constraint
- 2.3 Equilibrium and Social Welfare
- Demand Curves
- Supply Curves
- Equilibrium
- Social Efficiency
- Competitive Equilibrium Maximizes Social Efficiency
- From Social Efficiency to Social Welfare: The Role of Equity
- Choosing an Equity Criterion
- 2.4 Welfare Implications of Benefit Reductions: The TANF Example Continued
- 2.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Appendix to Chapter 2: The Mathematics of Utility Maximization
- Chapter 3: Empirical Tools of Public Finance
- 3.1 The Important Distinction Between Correlation and Causality
- The Problem
- 3.2 Measuring Causation with Data We’d Like to Have: Randomized Trials
- Randomized Trials as a Solution
- The Problem of Bias
- Randomized Trials of ERT
- Randomized Trials in the TANF Context
- Why We Need to Go Beyond Randomized Trials
- 3.3 Estimating Causation with Data We Actually Get: Observational Data
- Time Series Analysis
- Cross-Sectional Regression Analysis
- Quasi-Experiments
- Structural Modeling
- 3.4 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Appendix to Chapter 3: Cross-Sectional Regression Analysis
- Chapter 4: Budget Analysis and Deficit Financing
- 4.1 Government Budgeting
- The Budget Deficit in Recent Years
- The Budget Process
- State and International Deficit Rules
- 4.2 Measuring the Budgetary Position of the Government: Alternative Approaches
- Real Versus Nominal
- Economic Conditions
- Cash Versus Capital Accounting
- Static Versus Dynamic Scoring
- 4.3 Do Current Debts and Deficits Mean Anything? A Long-Run Perspective
- Background: Present Discounted Value
- Why Current Labels May Be Meaningless
- Measuring Long-Run Government Budgets
- What Does the U.S. Government Do?
- 4.4 Why Do We Care About the Government’s Fiscal Position?
- Short-Run Versus Long-Run Effects of the Government on the Macroeconomy
- Background: Savings and Economic Growth
- The Federal Budget, Interest Rates, and Economic Growth
- 4.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 5: Externalities: Problems and Solutions
- 5.1 Externality Theory
- Economics of Negative Production Externalities
- Negative Consumption Externalities
- Positive Externalities
- 5.2 Private-Sector Solutions to Negative Externalities
- The Solution
- The Problems with Coasian Solutions
- 5.3 Public-Sector Remedies for Externalities
- Corrective Taxation
- Subsidies
- Regulation
- 5.4 Distinctions Between Price and Quantity Approaches to Addressing Externalities
- Basic Model
- Price Regulation (Taxes) Versus Quantity Regulation in This Model
- Multiple Plants with Different Reduction Costs
- Uncertainty About Costs of Reduction
- 5.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 6: Externalities in Action: Environmental and Health Externalities
- 6.1 The Role of Economics in Environmental Regulation: The Case of Particulates
- History of Particulate Regulation
- Has the CAA Been a Success?
- 6.2 Climate Change
- The Kyoto Treaty
- Can Trading Make Environmental Agreements More Cost-Effective?
- The Paris Agreement and the Future
- 6.3 The Economics of Cigarette Smoking
- The Externalities of Cigarette Smoking
- 6.4 The Economics of Other Externality-Creating Behaviors
- Alcohol Use
- Illicit Drugs
- Summary
- 6.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 7: Public Goods
- 7.1 Optimal Provision of Public Goods
- Optimal Provision of Private Goods
- Optimal Provision of Public Goods
- 7.2 Private Provision of Public Goods
- Private-Sector Underprovision
- Can Private Providers Overcome the Free Rider Problem?
- When Is Private Provision Likely to Overcome the Free Rider Problem?
- 7.3 Public Provision of Public Goods
- The Right Mix of Public and Private
- Measuring the Costs and Benefits of Public Goods
- How Can We Measure Preferences for Public Goods?
- 7.4 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Appendix to Chapter 7: The Mathematics of Public Goods Provision
- Chapter 8: Cost-Benefit Analysis
- 8.1 Measuring the Costs of Public Projects
- The Example
- Measuring Current Costs
- 8.2 Measuring the Benefits of Public Projects
- Valuing Driving Time Saved
- Valuing Saved Lives
- Discounting Future Benefits
- Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
- 8.3 Putting It All Together
- Other Issues in Cost-Benefit Analysis
- 8.4 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 9: Political Economy
- 9.1 Unanimous Consent on Public Goods Levels
- Lindahl Pricing
- Problems with Lindahl Pricing
- 9.2 Mechanisms for Aggregating Individual Preferences
- Majority Voting: When It Works
- Majority Voting: When It Doesn’t Work
- Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem
- Restricting Preferences to Solve the Impossibility Problem
- Median Voter Theory
- The Potential Inefficiency of the Median Voter Outcome
- Summary
- 9.3 Representative Democracy
- Vote-Maximizing Politicians Represent the Median Voter
- Assumptions of the Median Voter Model
- Lobbying
- Evidence on the Median Voter Model for Representative Democracy
- Increasing Polarization in American Politics
- 9.4 Public Choice Theory: The Foundations of Government Failure
- Size-Maximizing Bureaucracy
- Leviathan Theory
- Corruption
- The Implications of Government Failure
- 9.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 10: State and Local Government Expenditures
- 10.1 Fiscal Federalism in the United States and Abroad
- Spending and Revenue of State and Local Governments
- Fiscal Federalism Abroad
- 10.2 Optimal Fiscal Federalism
- The Tiebout Hypothesis
- Problems with the Tiebout Model
- Evidence on the Tiebout Model
- Optimal Fiscal Federalism
- 10.3 Redistribution Across Communities
- Should We Care?
- Tools of Redistribution: Grants
- Redistribution in Action: School Finance Equalization
- 10.4 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 11: Education
- 11.1 Why Should the Government Be Involved in Education?
- Productivity
- Citizenship
- Credit Market Failures
- Failure to Maximize Family Utility
- Redistribution
- 11.2 How Is the Government Involved in Education?
- Free Public Education and Crowding Out
- Solving the Crowd-Out Problem: Vouchers
- Problems with Educational Vouchers
- 11.3 Evidence on Competition in Education Markets
- Direct Experience with Vouchers
- Experience with Public School Choice
- Experience with Public School Incentives
- Bottom Line on Vouchers and School Choice
- 11.4 Measuring the Returns to Education
- Effects of Education Levels on Productivity
- Effects of Education Levels on Other Outcomes
- The Impact of School Quality
- 11.5 The Role of the Government in Higher Education
- Current Government Role
- What Is the Market Failure, and How Should It Be Addressed?
- 11.6 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 12: Social Insurance: The New Function of Government
- 12.1 What Is Insurance and Why Do Individuals Value It?
- What Is Insurance?
- Why Do Individuals Value Insurance?
- Formalizing This Intuition: Expected Utility Model
- 12.2 Why Have Social Insurance? Asymmetric Information and Adverse Selection
- Asymmetric Information
- Example with Perfect Information
- Example with Asymmetric Information
- The Problem of Adverse Selection
- Does Asymmetric Information Necessarily Lead to Market Failure?
- How Does the Government Address Adverse Selection?
- 12.3 Other Reasons for Government Intervention in Insurance Markets
- Externalities
- Administrative Costs
- Redistribution
- Paternalism
- 12.4 Social Insurance Versus Self-Insurance: How Much Consumption Smoothing?
- Example: Unemployment Insurance
- Lessons for Consumption-Smoothing Role of Social Insurance
- 12.5 The Problem with Insurance: Moral Hazard
- What Determines Moral Hazard?
- Moral Hazard Is Multidimensional
- The Consequences of Moral Hazard
- 12.6 Putting It All Together: Optimal Social Insurance
- 12.7 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Appendix to Chapter 12: Mathematical Models of Expected Utility
- Chapter 13: Social Security
- 13.1 What Is Social Security, and How Does It Work?
- Program Details
- How Does Social Security Work over Time?
- How Does Social Security Redistribute in Practice?
- 13.2 Consumption-Smoothing Benefits of Social Security
- Rationales for Social Security
- Does Social Security Smooth Consumption?
- 13.3 Social Security and Retirement
- Theory
- Evidence
- Implications
- 13.4 Social Security Reform
- Reform First Steps: The Greenspan Commission
- Potential Next Steps: Incremental Reforms
- Fundamental Reform: Privatization
- 13.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 14: Unemployment Insurance, Disability Insurance, and Workers’ Compensation
- 14.1 Institutional Features of Unemployment Insurance, Disability Insurance, and Workers’ Compensation
- Institutional Features of Unemployment Insurance
- Institutional Features of Disability Insurance
- Institutional Features of Workers’ Compensation
- Comparison of the Features of UI, DI, and WC
- 14.2 Consumption-Smoothing Benefits of Social Insurance Programs
- 14.3 Moral Hazard Effects of Social Insurance Programs
- Moral Hazard Effects of Unemployment Insurance
- Evidence for Moral Hazard in DI
- Evidence for Moral Hazard in WC
- 14.4 The Costs and Benefits of Social Insurance to Firms
- The Effects of Partial Experience Rating in UI on Layoffs
- The “Benefits” of Partial Experience Rating
- Workers’ Compensation and Firms
- 14.5 Implications for Program Reform
- Benefits Generosity
- Targeting
- Worker Self-Insurance?
- 14.6 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Appendix to Chapter 14: Advanced Quasi-Experimental Analysis
- Chapter 15: Health Insurance I: Health Economics and Private Health Insurance
- 15.1 An Overview of Health Care in the United States
- How Health Insurance Works: The Basics
- Private Insurance
- Medicare
- Medicaid
- TRICARE/CHAMPVA
- The Uninsured
- 15.2 How Generous Should Insurance Be to Patients?
- Consumption-Smoothing Benefits of Health Insurance for Patients
- Moral Hazard Costs of Health Insurance for Patients
- How Elastic Is the Demand for Medical Care? The RAND Health Insurance Experiment
- Optimal Health Insurance
- 15.3 How Generous Should Insurance Be to Medical Providers?
- Managed Care and Prospective Reimbursement
- The Impacts of Managed Care
- How Should Providers Be Reimbursed?
- 15.4 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 16: Health Insurance II: Medicare, Medicaid, and Health Care Reform
- 16.1 The Medicaid Program for Low-Income Families
- How Medicaid Works
- Who Is Eligible for Medicaid?
- What Health Services Does Medicaid Cover?
- How Do Providers Get Paid?
- 16.2 What Are the Benefits of the Medicaid Program?
- Does Medicaid Provide Financial Protection?
- Does Medicaid Improve Health?
- How Does Medicaid Affect Health? Evidence
- 16.3 The Medicare Program
- How Medicare Works
- 16.4 Controlling Costs in the Medicare Program
- The Prospective Payment System
- Problems with PPS
- Lesson: The Difficulty of Partial Reform
- Medicare Managed Care
- Should Medicare Move to a Full-Choice Plan? Premium Support
- Gaps in Medicare Coverage
- 16.5 Long-Term Care
- Financing Long-Term Care
- 16.6 Health Care Reform and the ACA
- The Historical Impasse
- The Massachusetts Experiment with Incremental Universalism
- The Affordable Care Act
- Early Evidence on the Effects of the ACA
- The ACA Runs into Trouble
- What Does the Future Hold?
- 16.7 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 17: Income Inequality and Government Transfer Programs
- 17.1 Facts on Income Distribution in the United States
- Relative Income Inequality
- Absolute Deprivation and Poverty Rates
- What Matters—Relative or Absolute Deprivation?
- 17.2 Transfer Policy in the United States
- Cash Transfer Programs
- In-Kind Programs
- 17.3 The Moral Hazard Costs of Transfer Policy
- Moral Hazard Effects of a Means-Tested Transfer System
- Solving Moral Hazard by Lowering the Benefit Reduction Rate
- The “Iron Triangle” of Redistributive Programs
- 17.4 Reducing the Moral Hazard of Transfers
- Moving to Categorical Transfer Payments
- Using In-Kind Benefits
- Increasing Outside Options
- 17.5 Universal Basic Income?
- 17.6 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 18: Taxation: How It Works and What It Means
- 18.1 Types of Taxation
- Taxes on Earnings
- Taxes on Individual Income
- Taxes on Corporate Income
- Taxes on Wealth
- Taxes on Consumption
- Taxation Around the World
- 18.2 Structure of the Individual Income Tax in the United States
- Computing the Tax Base
- Tax Rates and Taxes Paid
- 18.3 Measuring the Fairness of Tax Systems
- Average and Marginal Tax Rates
- Vertical and Horizontal Equity
- Measuring Vertical Equity
- 18.4 Defining the Income Tax Base
- The Haig-Simons Comprehensive Income Definition
- Deviations Due to Ability-to-Pay Considerations
- Deviations Due to Costs of Earning Income
- 18.5 Externality/Public Goods Rationales for Deviating from Haig-Simons
- Charitable Giving
- Spending Crowd-Out Versus Tax Subsidy Crowd-In
- Consumer Sovereignty Versus Imperfect Information
- Housing
- Tax Deductions Versus Tax Credits
- Bottom Line: Tax Expenditures
- 18.6 The Appropriate Unit of Taxation
- The Problem of the “Marriage Tax”
- Marriage Taxes in Practice
- 18.7 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 19: The Equity Implications of Taxation: Tax Incidence
- 19.1 The Three Rules of Tax Incidence
- Rule 1: The Statutory Burden of a Tax Does Not Describe Who Really Bears the Tax
- Rule 2: The Side of the Market on Which the Tax Is Imposed Is Irrelevant to the Distribution of the Tax Burdens
- Rule 3: Parties with Inelastic Supply or Demand Bear Taxes; Parties with Elastic Supply or Demand Avoid Them
- Reminder: Tax Incidence Is About Prices, Not Quantities
- Reminder: Balanced Budget Tax Incidence
- 19.2 Example: Tax Incidence in Factor Markets
- 19.3 General Equilibrium Tax Incidence
- Effects of a Restaurant Tax: A General Equilibrium Example
- Issues to Consider in General Equilibrium Incidence Analysis
- 19.4 The Incidence of Taxation in the United States
- TPC Incidence Assumptions
- Results of TPC Incidence Analysis
- Current Versus Lifetime Income Incidence
- 19.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Appendix to Chapter 19: The Mathematics of Tax Incidence
- Chapter 20: Tax Inefficiencies and Their Implications for Optimal Taxation
- 20.1 Taxation and Economic Efficiency
- Graphical Approach
- Elasticities Determine Tax Inefficiency
- Determinants of Deadweight Loss
- Deadweight Loss and the Design of Efficient Tax Systems
- 20.2 Optimal Commodity Taxation
- Ramsey Taxation: The Theory of Optimal Commodity Taxation
- Inverse Elasticity Rule
- Equity Implications of the Ramsey Model
- 20.3 Optimal Income Taxes
- A Simple Example
- General Model with Behavioral Effects
- An Example
- 20.4 Tax-Benefit Linkages and the Financing of Social Insurance Programs
- The Model
- Issues Raised by Tax-Benefit Linkage Analysis
- 20.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Appendix to Chapter 20: The Mathematics of Optimal Taxation
- Chapter 21: Taxes on Labor Supply
- 21.1 Taxation and Labor Supply—Theory
- Basic Theory
- Limitations of the Theory: Constraints on Hours Worked and Overtime Pay Rules
- 21.2 Taxation and Labor Supply—Evidence
- Limitations of Existing Studies
- 21.3 Tax Policy to Promote Labor Supply: The Earned Income Tax Credit
- Background on the EITC
- Impact of EITC on Labor Supply: Theory
- Impact of EITC on Labor Supply: Evidence14
- Summary of the Evidence
- 21.4 The Tax Treatment of Child Care and Its Impact on Labor Supply
- The Tax Treatment of Child Care
- Options for Resolving Tax Wedges
- Comparing the Options
- 21.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 22: Taxes on Savings
- 22.1 Taxation and Savings—Theory and Evidence
- Traditional Theory
- Evidence: How Does the After-Tax Interest Rate Affect Savings?
- Inflation and the Taxation of Savings
- 22.2 Alternative Models of Savings
- Precautionary Savings Models
- Self-Control Models
- 22.3 Tax Incentives for Retirement Savings
- Available Tax Subsidies for Retirement Savings
- Theoretical Effects of Tax-Subsidized Retirement Savings
- Implications of Alternative Models
- Private Versus National Savings
- Evidence on Tax Incentives and Savings
- 22.4 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 23: Taxes on Risk Taking and Wealth
- 23.1 Taxation and Risk Taking
- Basic Financial Investment Model
- Real-World Complications
- Evidence on Taxation and Risk Taking
- Labor Investment Applications
- 23.2 Capital Gains Taxation
- Current Tax Treatment of Capital Gains
- What Are the Arguments for Tax Preferences for Capital Gains?
- What Are the Arguments Against Tax Preferences for Capital Gains?
- 23.3 Transfer Taxation
- Why Tax Wealth? Arguments for the Estate Tax
- Arguments Against the Estate Tax
- 23.4 Property Taxation
- Who Bears the Property Tax?
- Types of Property Taxation
- 23.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Chapter 24: Taxation of Business Income
- 24.1 What Are Corporations, and Why Do We Tax Them?
- Ownership Versus Control
- Firm Financing
- Why Do We Have a Corporate Tax?
- 24.2 The Structure of the Corporate Tax
- Revenues
- Expenses
- Corporate Tax Rate
- Tax Credits
- 24.3 The Incidence of the Corporate Tax
- 24.4 The Consequences of the Corporate Tax for Investment
- Theoretical Analysis of Corporate Tax and Investment Decisions
- Negative Effective Tax Rates
- Policy Implications of the Impact of the Corporate Tax on Investment
- 24.5 Treatment of International Corporate Income
- How to Tax International Income
- Global Versus Territorial Taxation
- 24.6 The Consequences of the Corporate Tax for Financing
- The Impact of Taxes on Financing
- Why Not All Debt?
- The Dividend Paradox
- How Should Dividends Be Taxed?
- Corporate Tax Integration
- 24.7 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Problems
- Chapter 25: Fundamental Tax Reform and Consumption Taxation
- 25.1 Why Fundamental Tax Reform?
- Improving Tax Compliance
- Making the Tax Code Simpler
- Improving Tax Efficiency
- Summary: The Benefits of Fundamental Tax Reform
- 25.2 The Politics and Economics of Tax Reform
- Political Pressures for a Complicated Tax Code
- Economic Pressures Against Broadening the Tax Base
- The Conundrum
- 25.3 Consumption Taxation
- Why Might Consumption Make a Better Tax Base?
- Why Might Consumption Be a Worse Tax Base?
- Designing a Consumption Tax
- Backing into Consumption Taxation: Cash-Flow Taxation
- 25.4 The Flat Tax
- Advantages of a Flat Tax
- Problems with the Flat Tax
- 25.5 Conclusion
- End of Chapter
- Highlights
- Questions and Problems
- Advanced Questions
- Glossary
- References
- Notes
- Index
- Back Cover
- Extended Descriptions
- FIGURE 1-1 Federal Government Spending.
- FIGURE 1-2 Total Government Spending.
- FIGURE 1-3 Federal versus State or Local Government Spending.
- FIGURE 1-4 Federal Revenues and Expenditures.
- FIGURE 1-5 Debt Levels of O E C D Nations.
- FIGURE 1-6 State and Local Government Receipts, Expenditures, and Surplus.
- FIGURE 1-7 Distribution of Federal and State Expenditures.
- FIGURE 1-8 Distribution of Federal and State Expenditures.
- FIGURE 2-1 Indifference Curves.
- FIGURE 2-2 Indifference Curve Analysis.
- FIGURE 2-3 Diminishing Marginal Utility.
- FIGURE 2-4 Marginal Rates of Substitution.
- FIGURE 2-5 Budget Constraint.
- FIGURE 2-6 Constrained Optimization.
- FIGURE 2-7 Substitution and Income Effects.
- FIGURE 2-8 The Consumption–Leisure Trade-off.
- FIGURE 2-9 Budget Constraint.
- FIGURE 2-10 Utility Maximization.
- FIGURE 2-11 Utility Maximization.
- FIGURE 2-12 Deriving the Demand Curve.
- FIGURE 2-13 Market Outcome.
- FIGURE 2-14 Consumer Surplus.
- FIGURE 2-15 Producer Surplus.
- FIGURE 2-16 Competitive Equilibrium.
- FIGURE 2-17 Welfare Implications.
- FIGURE 3-1 Average Benefit Guarantee.
- FIGURE 3-2 Real Cigarette Prices and Youth Smoking.
- FIGURE 3-3 T A N F Benefits and Labor Supply.
- FIGURE 3-4 T A N F Benefit Income and Labor Supply.
- FIGURE 4-1 Federal Taxes, Spending, and the Deficit.
- FIGURE 4-2 Economic Adjustment.
- FIGURE 4-3 Projected Versus Actual Surplus or Deficit.
- FIGURE 4-4 Capital Market Equilibrium.
- FIGURE 4-5 Worldwide Decline in Real Interest rates.
- FIGURE 5-1 Average Global Temperature.
- FIGURE 5-2 Market Failure due to Negative Production Externalities.
- FIGURE 5-3 Market Failure due to Negative Consumption Externalities.
- FIGURE 5-4 Market Failure due to Positive Production Externality.
- FIGURE 5-5 A Coasian Solution to Negative Production Externalities.
- FIGURE 5-6 Taxation as a Solution to Negative Production Externalities.
- FIGURE 5-7 Subsidies as a Solution to Positive Production Externalities.
- FIGURE 5-8 Market for Pollution Reduction.
- FIGURE 5-9 Pollution Reduction with Multiple Firms.
- FIGURE 5-10 Market for Pollution Reduction.
- FIGURE 6-1 Emissions in Counties
- FIGURE 6-2 Top 25 Fossil Fuel Emitters.
- FIGURE 6-3 Benefits of Trading.
- FIGURE 6-4 U.S. Adults Who Smoke Cigarettes.
- FIGURE 6-5 Changes in Drinking and Mortality
- FIGURE 6-6 Changes in Drinking and Mortality Around Age 21
- FIGURE 7-1 Horizontal Summation.
- FIGURE 7-2 Vertical Summation.
- FIGURE 9-1 Lindahl Pricing.
- TABLE 9-1: Majority voting delivers a consistent outcome.
- Table 9-2: Majority voting doesn’t deliver a consistent outcome.
- FIGURE 9-2 Single-Peaked Versus Non-Single-Peaked Preferences.
- FIGURE 9-3 Vote Maximization.
- FIGURE 9-4 Political Polarization.
- The U S Congress.
- FIGURE 10-1 Changing Fiscal Federalism.
- TABLE 10-1 Comparison of State Spending and Revenue.
- FIGURE 10-2 Education and Private Goods.
- FIGURE 10-3 Impact of a Matching Grant.
- FIGURE 10-4 Impact of an Unconditional Block Grant.
- FIGURE 10-5 Impact of a Conditional Block Grant.
- FIGURE 11-1 Education Spending and Outcomes.
- FIGURE 11-2 Education Spending.
- FIGURE 11-3 Public School Crowd-Out.
- FIGURE 11-4 Government Spending on Higher Education.
- FIGURE 12-1 Government Spending by Function.
- FIGURE 13-1 Social Security Benefits.
- FIGURE 13-2 Elderly poverty and social security.
- FIGURE 13-3 Elderly work and social security.
- FIGURE 13-4 Hazard rate of retirement.
- FIGURE 13-5 Implicit taxes.
- FIGURE 13-6 Ratio of Older Adults to Working-Age Population.
- FIGURE 14-1 Unemployment Benefit Schedule.
- FIGURE 14-2 Duration of U I Benefits.
- FIGURE 14-3 Effect of UI Benefits.
- FIGURE 14-4 Labor force Nonparticipation.
- FIGURE 14-5 D I Benefit Amount.
- FIGURE 14-6 Earnings by age.
- FIGURE 14-7 W C Benefit changes and Injury duration.
- FIGURE 14-8 Experience-Rating Schedule.
- FIGURE 14-9 Unemployment Insurance.
- FIGURE 15-1 Health Care Spending in O E C D Nations.
- FIGURE 15-2 Distribution of National Health Expenditures.
- FIGURE 15-3 Health System Outcomes.
- FIGURE 15-4 Breakdown of Health Care Overspending.
- FIGURE 15-5 Cost of Medical Procedures and Drugs.
- FIGURE 15-6 Cost of Medical Services.
- FIGURE 15-7 Patient-Side Moral Hazard.
- FIGURE 15-8 The flat of the curve.
- FIGURE 15-9 Age Profiles for Outpatient Visits and Inpatient Admissions.
- FIGURE 15-10 Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance.
- FIGURE 16-1 Medicaid.
- FIGURE 16-2 Timing of Hospital Discharges.
- FIGURE 16-3 Medicare beneficiaries.
- FIGURE 16-4 Incorporating H M Os into Medicare
- FIGURE 16-5 Uninsurance for Adults.
- FIGURE 16-6 Decrease in Mortality.
- FIGURE 17-1 Life Expectancies.
- FIGURE 17-2 Aggregate Income.
- FIGURE 17-3 Poverty Rates.
- FIGURE 17-4 Labour Supply Decisions.
- FIGURE 17-5 Labour Supply Decisions.
- FIGURE 17-6 Transfer Benefits and Single Motherhood.
- FIGURE 17-7 Distribution of Formal Care Consumption.
- FIGURE 17-8 Cash Transfer Opportunity Set.
- FIGURE 17-9 Tying Health Insurance to Cash Transfers.
- FIGURE 17-10 Transfer Caseloads.
- FIGURE 17-11 Average Annual Income Growth.
- FIGURE 17-12 Employment Impacts.
- FIGURE 18-1 Government Revenue
- FIGURE 18-2 International Tax Revenues.
- FIGURE 18-3 Federal Income Tax Rate Schedule.
- FIGURE 19-1 Sources of Federal Revenue.
- FIGURE 19-2 Statutory Burdens.
- FIGURE 19-3 Side of the Market.
- FIGURE 19-4 Inelastic Factors.
- FIGURE 19-5 Elastic Factors.
- FIGURE 19-6 Elasticity of Supply.
- FIGURE 19-7 Incidence Analysis.
- FIGURE 19-9 Tax on Bozeman Restaurants.
- FIGURE 19-9 Tax on Bozeman Restaurants.
- FIGURE 19-10 Bozeman Restaurant Tax on Labor Versus Capital.
- FIGURE 20-1 Deadweight Loss of a Tax.
- FIGURE 20-2 Deadweight Loss.
- FIGURE 20-3 Effects of the Window Tax.
- FIGURE 20-4 Effects of the Window Tax.
- FIGURE 20-5 Marginal Deadweight Loss.
- FIGURE 20-6 Preexisting Distortions.
- FIGURE 20-7 Low Rates Imposed on a Broad Base.
- FIGURE 20-8 Consequences of Subsidies and Taxes.
- FIGURE 20-9 The Laffer Curve.
- FIGURE 20-10 Optimal Income Taxation.
- FIGURE 20-11 Tax-Benefit Linkages.
- FIGURE 20-12 Taxation with No Deadweight Loss.
- FIGURE 21-1 Taxation and the Consumption-Leisure Trade-Off.
- FIGURE 21-2 Substitution Versus Income Effect.
- FIGURE 21-3 Distribution of Incomes.
- FIGURE 21-4 Earned Income Tax Credit.
- FIGURE 21-5 Earned Income Tax Credit.
- FIGURE 21-6 E I T C’s Effect on Labor Supply.
- FIGURE 21-7 Changes in the E I T C Structure.
- FIGURE 22-1 Taxation and the Intertemporal Consumption Decision.
- FIGURE 22-2 Intertemporal Substitution Versus Income Effect.
- FIGURE 22-3 Tax Subsidies and the Intertemporal Consumption Trade-Off.
- FIGURE 22-4 I R A’s and the Intertemporal Consumption Decision.
- FIGURE 22-5 Low Savers Versus High Savers.
- FIGURE 22-6 Individual Contributions Above and Below Top Tax Cutoff.
- FIGURE 23-1 Capital Gains Tax Rates and Capital Gains Realizations.
- FIGURE 23-2 Measuring the Response of Capital Gains Realizations to Tax Cuts
- FIGURE 24-1 Sources of Corporate Finance.
- FIGURE 24-2 Investment Decisions with No Corporate Tax.
- FIGURE 24-3 Investment Decision with a Tax on Corporate Income .
- FIGURE 24-4 Investment Decisions with Depreciation and the I T C.
- FIGURE 24-5 The Firm’s Financing Decision.
- FIGURE 25-1 Optimal Tax Evasion.
- FIGURE 25-2 Number of Pages in Individual Tax Return Documents.
- FIGURE 25-3 Optimal Tax Evasion
- FIGURE 25-4 Changes in the Tax Base.
- FIGURE 25-5 Consumption Taxation in OECD Nations.
- Back Cover.
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