EP ECONOMICS,AP EDITION-CONNECT ACCESS
20th Edition
ISBN: 9780021403455
Author: McConnell
Publisher: MCGRAW-HILL HIGHER EDUCATION
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Chapter 18, Problem 13DQ
To determine
Progressive tax system.
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Suppose George made $20,000 last year and that he lives in the country of Harmony. The way Harmony levies income taxes, each citizen must pay 10 percent in taxes on their first $10,000 in earnings and then 50 percent in taxes on anything else they might earn. So given that George earned $20,000 last year, his marginal tax rate on the last dollar he earns will be __________ and his average tax rate for his entire income will be _________________. a. 50 percent; 50 percent. b. 50 percent; less than 50 percent. c. 10 percent; 50 percent. d. 10 percent; less than 50 percent.
Suppose that the for every 10% increase in the price of gasoline, consumers
will decrease the quantity demanded by 1%, and suppliers will increase their
supply of gasoline by 9%. Next, suppose that there is a $0.50 per gallon tax on
gasoline, and after the tax quantity exchanged in the market is 15 billion
gallons of gasoline. Given this information, what is the total government
revenue from the tax? What is the consumer and producer tax incidence (how
much of the tax revenue would have come from consumers, and how much
from suppliers)?
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Suppose that the U.S. government decides to charge cola producers a tax. Before the tax, 30 billion cases of cola were sold every year at a price of $4 per case. After the tax, 23 billion cases of cola are sold every year; consumers pay $5 per case, and producers receive $2 per case (after paying the tax).
The amount of the tax on a case of cola is $_________ per case. Of this amount, the burden that falls on consumers is $_________ per case, and the burden that falls on producers is $__________ per case.
True or False: The effect of the tax on the quantity sold would have been smaller if the tax had been levied on consumers.
Chapter 18 Solutions
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- Suppose that the U.S. government decides to charge beer consumers a tax. Before the tax, 35 billion cases of beer were sold every year at a price of $6 per case. After the tax, 28 billion cases of beer are sold every year; consumers pay $7 per case (including the tax), and producers receive $4 per case. The amount of the tax on a case of beer is $ _________ per case. Of this amount, the burden that falls on consumers is $_________ per case, and the burden that falls on producers is $___________per case. True or False: The effect of the tax on the quantity sold would have been the same as if the tax had been levied on producers. True Falsearrow_forwardEconomics Below is a tax table. Assume I earn $150 a year. My tax bracket is my marginal tax rate is I pay in taxes. my average tax rate is ; and O to $100 is 10% $101 to $200 is 15% $201 to $300 is 20% O 10%; 15%; 13.5%; $17.50 O 15%; 15%; 11.7%; $17.50 O none of these O 15%; 15%; 12.5%; $13.50arrow_forwardIf Heather's tax liability increases from $10,000 to $16,000 when her income increases from $30,000 to $40,000, her marginal tax rate is 33 percent. 35 percent. 50 percent. O 60 percent.arrow_forward
- Suppose that the U.S. government decides to charge beer consumers a tax. Before the tax, 20 million cases of beer were sold every month at a price of $4 per case. After the tax, 14 million cases of beer are sold every month; consumers pay $5 per case (including the tax), and producers receive $1 per case. The amount of the tax on a case of beer is_______per case. Of this amount, the burden that falls on consumers is_______per case, and the burden that falls on producers is_____per case.arrow_forwardSuppose that the U.S. government decides to charge wine consumers a tax. Before the tax, 15 million bottles of wine were sold every month at a price of $7 per bottle. After the tax, 9 million bottles of wine are sold every month; consumers pay $10 per bottle (including the tax), and producers receive $4 per bottle. The amount of the tax on a bottle of wine is $_______ per bottle. Of this amount, the burden that falls on consumers is $________per bottle, and the burden that falls on producers is $_______per bottle.arrow_forward4. Suppose that there are two households in the economy, A and B, that they face the same wage rate w, and that the government initially uses a proportional income tax according to which each household must pay a fraction t of its labor income as income tax. Assume that given this tax scheme household A chooses to work full time while household B chooses to work part time. Now suppose that the government is interesting in studying the impact of changing the tax system to a progressive tax system where the household work- ing full time would pay a tax rate th >t while the household working part time would pay a rate ti < t. (a) Draw a graph of the impact of this change on the budget constraint that households face with the two different tax systems. (b) What would such a change in the tax system imply for the optimal choice of the two households?arrow_forward
- Suppose in Fiscalville there is no tax on the first $10,000 of income, but a 20 percent tax on earnings between $10,001 and $20,000 and a 30 percent tax on income between $20,001 and $30,000. Any income above $30,000 is taxed at 40 percent. If your income is $50,000, how much will you pay in taxesarrow_forward1. Suppose the marginal or bracket tax rate for income from $1 to $15,000 is 12%, the marginal tax rate for income between $15,001 and $30,000 is 20%, and the marginal tax rate for income between $30,001 and $50,000 is 25%. How much in taxes would someone with a $40,000 income pay? Is this tax system progressive, regressive, or proportional? Why?arrow_forwardSuppose that the U.S. government decides to charge wine producers a tax. Before the tax, 20 million bottles of wine were sold every month at a price of $5 per bottle. After the tax, 13 million bottles of wine are sold every month; consumers pay $6 per bottle, and producers receive $3 per bottle (after paying the tax). The amount of the tax on a bottle of wine is ____ per bottle. Of this amount, the burden that falls on consumers is ____ per bottle, and the burden that falls on producers is _____ per bottle. (Answer all) True or False: The effect of the tax on the quantity sold would have been larger if the tax had been levied on consumers.arrow_forward
- c. Does the tax-spending system in the United States redistribute resources from higher-income earners to lower-income earners? O Yes, because the tax-spending system in the United States is proportional. O Yes, because the tax-spending system in the United States is progressive. O No, because the tax system is regressive and the tax-spending system is progressive. O No, because the tax system is progressive and the tax-spending system is regressive.arrow_forwardIf the tax code exempts the first $20,000 of income from taxation and then taxes 25 percent of all income above that level, then a person who earns percent and a marginal tax rate of $50,000 has an average tax rate of percent. O 15, 25 O 25, 15 O 25, 30 O 30, 25arrow_forwardQuestion 5: Combined state and federal taxes on gasoline average around 50 cents per gallon, and these taxes are statutorily levied on gasoline sellers. Because the demand for gasoline is relatively inelastic compared to the supply of gasoline: buyers likely do not bear much of the actual burden because it is statutorily levied on sellers who must submit the tax payments. sellers likely bear most of the actual burden of the tax through lower gasoline prices. O the net price received by sellers after they pay taxes likely falls by almost the full amount of the tax. O buyers likely bear most of the actual burden of the tax through higher gasoline prices.arrow_forward
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