Abstract
A classical criterion for apportioning taxes is that all should sacrifice equally in loss of utility. Suppose that a method of apportioning taxes is continuous and has the following four properties: (i) the way that taxpayers split a given tax total depends only on their own taxable incomes; (ii) an increase in the tax total implies that everyone pays more; (iii) every incremental increase in tax is apportioned according to taxpayers' current after-tax incomes; (iv) the ordering of taxpayers by pre-tax income and after-tax income is the same. Then there exists a utility function relative to which all sacrifice equally. © 1988.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Young, H. P. (1988). Distributive justice in taxation. Journal of Economic Theory, 44(2), 321–335. https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-0531(88)90007-5
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