EP ECONOMICS,AP EDITION-CONNECT ACCESS
20th Edition
ISBN: 9780021403455
Author: McConnell
Publisher: MCGRAW-HILL HIGHER EDUCATION
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Chapter 36, Problem 6DQ
To determine
Approval and criticism of Laffer theory.
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Kathy works full time during the day as an economist and faces
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- 5. LO 4 Suppose, as in the federal income tax code for the United States, that the representative con- sumer faces a wage income tax with a standard deduction. That is, the representative consumer pays no tax on wage income for the first x units of real wage income, and then pays a proportional taxt on each unit of real wage income greater than x Therefore, the consumer's budget constraint given by C wh -D + if wh- D=x., or C (1-wh-D+ tx+ if_wCh = D2 Now, suppose that the government reduces tax deduction x Using diagrams, determine the effects of this tax change on the consumer, and explain your results in terms of income and sub stitution effects. Make sure that you consider two cases. In the first case, the consumer does not pay any tax before x is reduced, and in the second case, the consumer pays a positive tax before x is reducedarrow_forwardJust need number 8 answered...#7 is there for reference.arrow_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_forward
- PLS HELP ASAP ON BOTHarrow_forwardConsider an economy in which individuals choose between work time and leisure time. They spend all of their wages from work hours on consumption goods. Suppose that the government introduces an ad valorem tax of 45 percent imposed on all consumption goods and on leisure time. In the case of consumption, the tax applies to the expenditure amount. In the case of leisure time, the tax applies to the value of leisure time assessed at the individual's hourly wage from labour. What income tax rate is equivalent to this tax on consumption and leisure? [NOTE: If necessary, please round your answer to the nearest percent. Enter the whole number corresponding to the percentage rate. Do not enter the percent sign. For example, if your answer is 12 percent, you should enter 12 in the answer space, not 0.12.]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 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.arrow_forward12. In Taxland, the first $10,000 earned per year is exempt from taxation. Between $10,000.01 and $30,000, the tax rate is 25 percent. Between $30,000.01 and $50,000, it's 30 percent. Above $50,000, it's 35 percent. You're earning $80,000 a year. (LO18-4) a. How much in taxes will you have to pay? b. What is your average tax rate? c. What is your marginal tax rate?arrow_forward7. LO 2, 4 Suppose that a consumer can earn a higher wage rate for working overtime. That is, for the first q hours the consumer works, he or she receives a real wage rate of w, and for hours worked more than q he or she receives w, where W2>W1. Suppose that the consumer pays no taxes and receives no nonwage income, and he or she is free to choose hours of work. (a) Draw the consumer's budget constraint, and show his or her optimal choice of consump- tion and leisure (b) Show that the consumer would never work hours, or anything very close to q Explain the intuition behind this. (c) Determine what hours. happens if the overtime wage rate w2 increases. Explain your results in terms of income and substitution effects. You must consider the case of a worker who initially works overtime, and a worker who initially does not work overtime.arrow_forward
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