Taxing Humans: Pitfalls of the Mechanism Design Approach and Potential Resolutions

A growing body of evidence suggests that psychological biases can lead different implementations of otherwise equivalent tax incentives to result in meaningfully different behaviors. We argue that in the presence of such failures of “implementation invariance,” decoupling the question of optimal feasible allocations from the tax system used to induce them—the “mechanism design approach” to tax analysis—cannot be the right approach to analyzing optimal tax systems. After reviewing the diverse psychologies that lead to failures of implementation invariance, we illustrate our argument by formally deriving three basic lessons that arise in the presence of these biases. First, the mechanism design approach neither estimates nor bounds the welfare computed under psychologically realistic assumptions about individuals’ responses to the tax instruments used in practice. Second, the optimal allocations from abstract mechanisms may not be implementable with concrete tax policies, and vice versa. Third, the integration of these biases may mitigate the importance of information asymmetries, resulting in optimal tax formulas more closely approximated by classical Ramsey results. We conclude by proposing that a “behavioral” extension of the “sufficient statistics” approach is a more fruitful way forward in the presence of such psychological biases.

[1]  Jacob Goldin,et al.  Smoke Gets in Your Eyes: Cigarette Tax Salience and Regressivity , 2013 .

[2]  Joachim Weimann,et al.  Perception of income tax rates: evidence from Germany , 2015 .

[3]  Raj Chetty,et al.  Salience and Taxation: Theory and Evidence , 2007 .

[4]  Saurabh Bhargava,et al.  Psychological Frictions and the Incomplete Take-Up of Social Benefits: Evidence from an IRS Field Experiment , 2015 .

[5]  A. Atkinson,et al.  The design of tax structure: Direct versus indirect taxation , 1976 .

[6]  Emmanuel Saez Income Taxation , 2019, Springer Texts in Business and Economics.

[7]  Peter A. Diamond,et al.  A many-person Ramsey tax rule , 1975 .

[8]  M. Golosov,et al.  Preference Heterogeneity and Optimal Capital Income Taxation , 2010 .

[9]  Youssef Benzarti How Taxing Is Tax Filing? Leaving Money on the Table Because of Hassle Costs , 2015 .

[10]  Jacob Goldin Optimal Tax Salience , 2015 .

[11]  Emmanuel Saez,et al.  Using Differences in Knowledge Across Neighborhoods to Uncover the Impacts of the EITC on Earnings , 2013 .

[12]  David Gill,et al.  Nuffield Centre for Experimental Social Sciences Discussion Paper Series a Structural Analysis of Disappointment Aversion in a Real Effort Competition a Structural Analysis of Disappointment Aversion in a Real Effort Competition , 2022 .

[13]  Koichiro Ito,et al.  Do Consumers Respond to Marginal or Average Price? Evidence from Nonlinear Electricity Pricing , 2012 .

[14]  Amy N. Finkelstein E-Ztax: Tax Salience and Tax Rates , 2007 .

[15]  Emmanuel Saez,et al.  Teaching the Tax Code: Earnings Responses to an Experiment with EITC Recipients , 2009 .

[16]  Alex Rees-Jones,et al.  Suboptimal Behavior in Strategy-Proof Mechanisms: Evidence from the Residency Match , 2016, Games Econ. Behav..

[17]  X. Gabaix,et al.  Optimal Taxation with Behavioral Agents , 2015, American Economic Review.

[18]  Optimal taxation when people do not maximize well-being , 2016 .

[19]  R. Kanbur,et al.  Moral Hazard, Income Taxation and Prospect Theory , 2008 .

[20]  Naomi E. Feldman,et al.  Taxpayer Confusion: Evidence from the Child Tax Credit , 2014 .

[21]  J. Slemrod,et al.  Taxing Ourselves, 3rd Edition: A Citizen's Guide to the Debate over Taxes , 2004 .

[22]  A. Rees-Jones Quantifying Loss-Averse Tax Manipulation , 2018 .

[23]  Benjamin M. Miller,et al.  THE SALIENCE OF COMPLEX TAX CHANGES: EVIDENCE FROM THE CHILD AND DEPENDENT CARE CREDIT EXPANSION , 2015, National Tax Journal.

[24]  Taxpayer Confusion: Evidence from the Child Tax Credit , 2014 .

[25]  E. Fujii,et al.  On the Accuracy of Tax Perceptions , 1988 .

[26]  J. Mirrlees An Exploration in the Theory of Optimum Income Taxation an Exploration in the Theory of Optimum Income Taxation L Y 2 , 2022 .

[27]  B. Handel,et al.  Information Frictions and Adverse Selection: Policy Interventions in Health Insurance Markets , 2015, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[28]  Avinatan Hassidim,et al.  "Strategic" Behavior in a Strategy-proof Environment , 2016, EC.

[29]  Ben Lockwood Optimal Income Taxation with Present Bias , 2020, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy.

[30]  Simon Jäger,et al.  Complex Tax Incentives , 2015 .

[31]  Naomi E. Feldman,et al.  RAISING THE STAKES , 2018, National Tax Journal.

[32]  B. Handel,et al.  Health Insurance for "Humans": Information Frictions, Plan Choice, and Consumer Welfare , 2013 .

[33]  R. Myerson Incentive Compatibility and the Bargaining Problem , 1979 .

[34]  B. Bernheim,et al.  Beyond Revealed Preference: Choice Theoretic Foundations for Behavioral Welfare Economics , 2008 .

[35]  C. D. Bartolome Which tax rate do people use: Average or marginal? , 1991 .

[36]  Raj Chetty,et al.  Salience and taxation: theory and evidence , 2008 .

[37]  Emmanuel Saez,et al.  You have printed the following article : Using Elasticities to Derive Optimal Income Tax Rates , 2007 .

[38]  E. Kirchler The Economic Psychology of Tax Behaviour , 2007 .

[39]  Raj Chetty,et al.  Sufficient Statistics for Welfare Analysis : A Bridge Between Structural and Reduced-Form Methods , 2009 .

[40]  Emmanuel Saez,et al.  The Case for a Progressive Tax: From Basic Research to Policy Recommendations , 2011 .

[41]  H. Allcott,et al.  Evaluating Behaviorally-Motivated Policy: Experimental Evidence from the Lightbulb Market , 2014 .

[42]  Michael S. Gideon Do Individuals Perceive Income Tax Rates Correctly? , 2017, Public finance review : PFR.

[43]  Ronald M. Harstad,et al.  Information Impact and Allocation Rules in Auctions with Affiliated Private Values: A Laboratory Study , 1987 .

[44]  K. Judd,et al.  New Dynamic Public Finance: A User's Guide [with Comments and Discussion] , 2006, NBER Macroeconomics Annual.

[45]  Johannes Spinnewijn Heterogeneity, Demand for Insurance and Adverse Selection , 2012 .

[46]  Dmitry Taubinsky,et al.  Heuristic Perceptions of the Income Tax: Evidence and Implications for Debiasing , 2016 .

[47]  Attention Variation and Welfare: Theory and Evidence from a Tax Salience Experiment , 2018 .

[48]  B. Handel Adverse Selection and Inertia in Health Insurance Markets: When Nudging Hurts. , 2013, The American economic review.

[49]  Timothy N. Cason,et al.  Misconceptions and Game Form Recognition: Challenges to Theories of Revealed Preference and Framing , 2014, Journal of Political Economy.

[50]  A. Persson,et al.  Tax compliance and loss aversion * , 2013 .