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The optimal income taxation of couples

Kleven, Henrik Jacobsen, Thustrup Kreiner, Claus and Saez, Emmanuel (2006) The optimal income taxation of couples. . National Bureau for Economic Research, Cambridge, MA., USA.

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Abstract

This paper analyzes the optimal income tax treatment of couples. Each couple is modelled as a single rational economic agent supplying labor along two dimensions: primary and secondary earnings. We consider fully general joint income tax systems. Separate taxation is never optimal if social welfare depends on total couple incomes. In a model where secondary earners make only a binary work decision (work or not work), we demonstrate that the marginal tax rate of the primary earner is lower when the spouse works. As a result, the tax distortion on the secondary earner decreases with the earnings of the primary earner and actually vanishes to zero asymptotically. Such negative jointness is optimal because redistribution from two-earner toward one-earner couples is more valuable when primary earner income is lower. We also consider a model where both spouses display intensive labor supply responses. In that context, we show that, starting from the optimal separable tax schedules, introducing some negative jointness is always desirable. Numerical simulations suggest that, in that model, it is also optimal for the marginal tax rate on one earner to decrease with the earnings of his/her spouse. We argue that many actual redistribution systems, featuring family-based transfers combined with individually-based taxes, generate schedules with negative jointness.

Item Type: Monograph (Working Paper)
Official URL: http://www.nber.org
Additional Information: © 2006 Henrik Jacobsen Kleven, Claus Thustrup Kreiner, and Emmanuel Saez
Divisions: Economics
STICERD
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HJ Public Finance
JEL classification: H - Public Economics > H2 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue > H21 - Efficiency; Optimal Taxation
Date Deposited: 05 Jun 2008 10:25
Last Modified: 13 Sep 2024 20:02
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/5392

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