Posts tagged tax
December 21 - Tax Incidence

The economics of tax incidence concerns the question of who ultimately bears the burden of taxation—whether it falls on consumers, workers, or producers—and under what conditions that burden shifts between them. It is a foundational topic in public economics, tracing back to the work of early classical economists such as David Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, and later formalised within the marginalist revolution of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The key insight is that the party legally responsible for paying a tax is not necessarily the one who bears its economic cost. Rather, the incidence of a tax depends on the relative elasticities of supply and demand in the market affected.

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Is reality catching up with investors' favourite narratives?

I am still willing to give Mr. Trump the benefit of the doubt. We have no actual policymaking to judge yet, and at least some of the people he is surrounding himself with look capable. I admit, however, that the burden of evidence is getting heavy. The president-elect's tweets, on their own, are evidence that he has tendency to act long before thinking. Last week's presser also provided a timely reminder that we are dealing with a volatile character. I understand that infuriating "soft" liberals, such as yours truly, is exactly what Mr. Trump and his strategists want. I have no doubt that the incoming administration's communication "style" is carefully planned. The base loves it! But problems are brewing, chiefly among which is the growing chasm between Mr. Trump and the intelligence apparatus upon which he will so desperately depend for policymaking when he takes office. 

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