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Distortionary costs of taxation refer to things like individuals’ reluctance to work or invest more as a result of governments raising taxes. In this video, BAS JACOBS considers whether governments should apply a correction for such costs of taxation in social benefit cost analyses. Applying the optimal taxation model, Jacobs notes that the distributional benefits of public investment in projects like bridges or swimming pools are often neglected by economists. He argues that there is no need to correct social cost benefits for the distortions of taxation because they are compensated by distributional benefits. Concluding that more public projects would be likely to be approved under this reasoning, Jacobs also makes a persuasive case for its relevance to other branches of public economics.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21036/LTPUB10735

Researcher

Bas Jacobs is the Sijbren Cnossen Professor of Public Economics at Erasmus University, Rotterdam where he is Academic Director of the Executive and Master Programs in Policy Economics. Willem Duisenberg Fellow at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in 2018-19, Jacobs has previously held visiting scholarships at Oxford University, the University of California, Berkeley and the International Monetary Fund. His main research interests include public finance, macroeconomics, economic policy and human capital. An authoritative voice on economic matters in the Dutch media, Jacobs was a recipient of the IIPF Young Economists Award in 2013.

Original publication

The Marginal Cost of Public Funds Is One at the Optimal Tax System

Jacobs Bas
International Tax and Public Finance
Published in 2018