Taxation and the allocation of talent

Taxation affects the allocation of talented individuals across professions by blunting material incentives and thus magnifying nonpecuniary incentives of pursuing a “calling.” Estimates from the literature suggest that high-paying professions have negative externalities, whereas lowpaying profession...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of political economy 2017-10, Vol.125 (5), p.1635-1682
Hauptverfasser: Lockwood, Ben, Nathanson, Charles G, Weyl, E. Glen
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Taxation affects the allocation of talented individuals across professions by blunting material incentives and thus magnifying nonpecuniary incentives of pursuing a “calling.” Estimates from the literature suggest that high-paying professions have negative externalities, whereas lowpaying professions have positive externalities. A calibrated model therefore prescribes negative marginal tax rates on middle-class incomes and positive rates on the rich. The welfare gains from implementing such a policy are small and are dwarfed by the gains from profession-specific taxes and subsidies. These results depend crucially on externality estimates and labor substitution patterns across professions, both of which are very uncertain given existing empirical evidence.
ISSN:0047-2697
1537-534X
0022-3808
1537-534X
DOI:10.1086/693393