Research on Optimal Taxation of Capital Income by Aart Gerritsen, Bas Jacobs, and Alexandra Rusu has been published in The Economic Journal
The paper 'Optimal Taxation of Capital Income with Heterogeneous Rates of Return' by Research Fellows Aart Gerritsen (Erasmus University Rotterdam) and Bas Jacobs (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), along with Kevin Spiritus (Erasmus University Rotterdam), and Tinbergen Institute alumna Alexandra Rusu (OECD), has been published online in The Economic Journal (September 2024).
The study emphasizes the role of return heterogeneity in designing equitable and efficient taxation policies, highlighting that taxing capital income can play a significant role in achieving societal goals.
Abstract
We derive the Pareto-efficient mix of non-linear taxes on labour income and capital income if people differ in their rates of return on capital. We allow for two reasons why rates of return differ: because individuals with higher ability are better able to invest their capital or because wealthier individuals enjoy scale effects in wealth accumulation. In both cases, a strictly positive tax on capital income is part of any Pareto-efficient tax system. We derive a condition for the Pareto-efficient tax mix that relies solely on empirical sufficient statistics—not on social welfare weights—and find that Pareto-efficient taxes on capital income increase with the degree of return heterogeneity. Numerical simulations for empirically plausible return heterogeneity suggest that Pareto-efficient marginal tax rates on capital income are positive and substantial.
Article citation
Aart Gerritsen, Bas Jacobs, Kevin Spiritus, and Alexandra V Rusu. September 2024. "Optimal Taxation of Capital Income with Heterogeneous Rates of Return" The Economic Journal (September 2024), doi.org/10.1093/ej/ueae083