The effect of tax enforcement on tax elasticities: Evidence from charitable contributions in France
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- dc.contributor.author Fack, Gabrielleca
- dc.contributor.author Landais, Camilleca
- dc.contributor.other Universitat Pompeu Fabra. Departament d'Economia i Empresa
- dc.date.accessioned 2017-07-26T12:07:57Z
- dc.date.available 2017-07-26T12:07:57Z
- dc.date.issued 2013-11-01
- dc.date.modified 2017-07-23T02:16:01Z
- dc.description.abstract Optimal tax formulas expressed in "sufficient statistics" are usually calibrated under the assumption that the relevant tax elasticities are unaffected by other available policy instruments. In practice though, tax authorities have many more instruments than the mere tax rates and tax elasticities are functions of all these policy instruments. In this paper we provide evidence that tax elasticities are extremely sensitive to a particular policy instrument: the level of tax enforcement. We exploit a natural experiment that took place in France in 1983, when the tax administration tightened the requirements to claim charitable deductions. The reform led to a substantial drop in the amount of contributions reported to the administration, which can be credibly attributed to overreporting of charitable contributions before the reform, rather than to a real change in giving behaviours. We show that the reform was also associated with a substantial decline in the absolute value of the elasticity of reported contributions. This finding allows us to partially identify the elasticity of overreporting contributions, which is shown to be large and inferior to -2 in the lax enforcement regime. We further show using bunching of taxpayers at kink-points of the tax schedule that the elasticity of taxable income also experienced a significant decline after the reform. Our results suggest that optimizing the tax rate for a given tax elasticity when other policy instruments are not optimized can lead to misleading conclusions when tax authorities have another instrument that could set the tax elasticity itself at its optimal level as in Kopczuk and Slemrod [2002].
- dc.format.mimetype application/pdfca
- dc.identifier https://econ-papers.upf.edu/ca/paper.php?id=1406
- dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10230/21330
- dc.language.iso eng
- dc.relation.ispartofseries Economics and Business Working Papers Series; 1406
- dc.rights L'accés als continguts d'aquest document queda condicionat a l'acceptació de les condicions d'ús establertes per la següent llicència Creative Commons
- dc.rights.accessRights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
- dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/
- dc.subject.keyword tax evasion
- dc.subject.keyword tax enforcement
- dc.subject.keyword charitable giving
- dc.subject.keyword taxable income elasticity
- dc.subject.keyword Labour, Public, Development and Health Economics
- dc.title The effect of tax enforcement on tax elasticities: Evidence from charitable contributions in Franceca
- dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper