Optimal Nonlinear Taxation of Income and Savings without Commitment
Working Paper No. 08-W05
Craig Brett and John A. Weymark
ABSTRACT [article]
Optimal nonlinear taxation of
income and savings is considered in a two-period model with two
individuals who have additively separable preferences and who only
differ in their skill levels. When the government can commit to
its second period policy, taxes on savings do not form part of the
optimal tax mix. When commitment is not possible, the optimal tax
scheme distorts private savings behavior. If the types are
separated in period one, it is optimal to tax the savings of the
high-skilled individual and to tax the savings of the low-skilled
individual at a lower, possibly negative, rate. If the types are
pooled in period one, it is optimal for the low-skilled
(high-skilled) individual to face a marginal savings tax
(subsidy). In both cases, the savings of the high-skilled
individual are distorted because this individual rationally
expects that some of his savings will be redistributed to the
low-skilled individual in the second period. The savings of the
low-skilled individual in the separating case are taxed at a lower
rate so as to relax an incentive compatibility constraint.
Keywords and Phrases: Asymmetric information, commitment, dynamic
optimal taxation, optimal income taxation, savings taxation, time
consistency
JEL Classification Numbers: D82, H21