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Which kind of taxes have the lowest deadweight loss?

What is some good research done about this? Different economists make wildly diverging claims, but surely there must be some empirical basis to this discussion.

Answer 838

Any tax that corrects a market inefficiency will have no deadweight loss; it will have quite the reverse effect.

As such, any Pigouvian tax that in part or in whole adds a price onto what otherwise would be an unpriced negative externality, and for which the revenue is greater than the direct cost of collection, has a negative deadweight loss.

Some examples are: UK fuel duty; carbon taxes; landfill tax; taxes on cigarette and alcohol.

It is important to bear in mind that any intention behind the tax, and its effect, are separate things: a tax may or may not be devised to correct a market inefficiency; it may have been introduced as a “sin” tax, or as a tax on something just because it was easy to collect revenue, hard to evade, and the target product or service was price-inelastic: all these are by-the-by; what’s important is not the intention, but whether or not they do price negative externalities, and thus have negative deadweight losses.

A lot of work has been done on the externalities of each of the things I mentioned: see for example the work of Nicholas Stern and Chris Hope on carbon taxes; David Pearce on environmental taxes such as the landfill tax; others on the health and crime costs of alcohol; the environmental, social, climate, noise and health costs of petrol, and so on.


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