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Return to original document VAT Worksheet - VAT - Taxing externalities?This worksheet deals with how indirect tax changes may be used to try to take account of externalities in the consumption of various goods to ensure that the optimum quantity of a good is consumed. Step 1 - The defining moment?Find out and write down definitions for the terms below. To help you in this you may want to use the VAT theory section and the glossary of the Virtual Economy. You can also access these from the side panel or the navigation bar at the top of the page. Indirect taxes | | | Positive externalities | | | Negative externalities | | | Consumption externalities | | | Production externalities | | | In the table below, we have given one example of each type of externality. See if you can add two more examples of each:
Step 2 - Taxing it?(N.B. This step is the same as Step 2 in VAT worksheet 1, so if you have already done this you may want to skip to Step 3) Use either your course materials or the resources available in the Virtual Economy to help you find out about all the indirect taxes
Why does the government change the level of the per-unit taxes in each budget, but not the ad-valorem ones? | | Step 3 - Externalities? What externalities?As we have seen in step 2, the government tax a variety of products. Clearly they do this to raise revenue, but they may also do it because there are external costs In the table below, fill in examples of external costs (or benefits) that may arise from consumption or production of the good given. We have started off with one example, fill in as many more as you can for each good:
Step 4 - Taxing it up?It is the presence of external costs, as we have seen above, that may cause the government to tax some goods. The tax should therefore be equivalent to the external costs to ensure that the optimum amount for society is consumed. If the government misjudge the level of external costs, and put a tax on the good that is too high will the amount consumed be above or below the social optimum? Above optimum / Below optimum (Delete as appropriate) If the amount of the tax is too low will the amount consumed be above or below the social optimum? Above optimum / Below optimum (Delete as appropriate) On the diagrams below we have shown the level of private cost (MC) and the social cost (MSC - private costs + external costs). Draw in an additional line to show the amount of the tax for the two possibilities above - first when the tax is too high (greater than the external costs) and second when the tax is too low (less than the external costs): 1...The tax levied is greater than the external costs 2...The tax levied is less than the external costs Step 5 - Taxing it up in the real worldIn practice there are many other factors that affect the level of indirect taxes imposed by the government - not least that they need to raise revenue to pay for public services. Changing the level of indirect taxes will also have significant effects on the economy. Let's say that the government feel that they have set indirect taxes too low to account for the level of external costs, and so decide to increase them significantly. Go to the model
What effect has this had on the economy? Note the changes down in the table below:
What about individual families in the economy? How have they fared? Note down in the table below the change in income they have had and calculate the gains / losses shown in the next two columns:
Which family has lost the most as a percentage of their income? | Which family has lost the least as a percentage of their income? | What disadvantages of using indirect taxes in this way are evident from the data above? | | | | | | | | | | What advantages are there to this policy of increasing indirect taxes to reflect the level of external costs? | | | | | | | | | | |
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