Discrete prices and the incidence and efficiency of excise taxes Christopher T. Conlon, Nirupama L. Rao
By: Conlon, Christopher T
.
Contributor(s): Rao, Nirupama
.
Material type: 




Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Artículos | IEF | IEF | OP 2135/2020/4-4 (Browse shelf) | Available | OP 2135/2020/4-4 |
Browsing IEF Shelves Close shelf browser
No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | ||
OP 2135/2020/4-1 Child care subsidies, quality, and optimal income taxation | OP 2135/2020/4-2 How taxing is tax filing? | OP 2135/2020/4-3 Hidden baggage | OP 2135/2020/4-4 Discrete prices and the incidence and efficiency of excise taxes | OP 2135/2020/4-5 Optimal income taxation with present bias | OP 2135/2021/1 American Economic Journal : Economic Policy | OP 2135/2021/1-1 Unemployment insurance taxes and labor demand |
Resumen.
Bibliografía.
This paper uses UPC-level data to examine the relationship between excise taxes, retail prices, and consumer welfare in the distilled spirits market. We document a nominal rigidity in retail prices that arises because firms largely choose prices that end in 99 cents and change prices in whole-dollar increments. A correctly specified model, like an ordered logit, takes this discreteness into account when predicting the effects of alternative taxes. Explicitly accounting for price points substantially impacts estimates of tax incidence and the excess burden cost of tax revenue. Meaningful nonmonotonicities in these quantities expand the potential considerations in setting excise taxes.
There are no comments for this item.