Microeconomics, Student Value Edition Plus MyLab Economics with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (9th Edition) (Pearson Series in Economics)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9780134643175
Author: Robert Pindyck, Daniel Rubinfeld
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 14, Problem 2E
To determine
Budget line and the effect on labor supply curve by the new program
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Assume that workers whoses are less than $8000 currently pay no federal income taxes. Suppose a new government program guarantees each worker $4000, whether or not he or she earns any income. For all earned income up to $8000, the worker must pay a 50- percent tax. Draw the budget line facing the worker under this new program. Using the line drawing tool, draw the new budget line facing a worker whose wage is such that his or her pre-tax earned income is less than $8000. Label this line 'BC2'.
Assume that workers whose are less than $8000 currently pay no federal income taxes. Suppose a new government program guarantees each worker $4000, whether or not he or she earns any income. For all earned income up to $8000, the worker must pay a 50- percent tax. How is the program likely to affect the labor supply curve of workers? For workers whose wages such that their pre-tax earned incomes are less than $8000, labor supply will be..
a. zero because there will be no incentive to work
b. zero because there will be a negative income effect (in terms of work hours)
c. zero because after-tax wages will be higher
d. positive because after-tax wages will be higher
e. positive because there will be a positive substitution effect (in terms of work hours)
One proposal for reforming the welfare system is to create a negative income tax. Under the negative income tax, each person is entitled to a grant of G dollars permonth. For every dollar the person earns, the grant is reduced by t dollars.
a. Suppose G = 200 and t = 0.40. Consider an individual whose hourly wage = $10. There are 30 days in a month, so the total allotment of T = 720. Sketch the budgetconstraint before and after the introduction of the negative income tax.
b. Would people work more or less with the implementation of this system?
c. What if t = 100%? Explain!
Chapter 14 Solutions
Microeconomics, Student Value Edition Plus MyLab Economics with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (9th Edition) (Pearson Series in Economics)
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- Eric earns a base salary of $50,000 as a shipwreck diver and is subject to the following hypothetical income tax bracket. Eric is considering taking on an additional dive that will increase his income by $5,000. In order for Eric to deem the dive worth his time, it must earn him $3,000 after taxes. Please round all answers to two decimal places. Income $0-$10,000 $10,001-$30,000 $30,001-$50,000 $50,001+ Tax rate 5% 10% 20% 50% What is the marginal tax rate associated with taking on this dive? What is Eric's average tax rate if the extra dive is accepted? Given the information, will Eric undertake this extra dive? yes no O need more information How much does Eric end up paying in taxes?arrow_forwardConsider a person who can work up to 80 hours each week at a pretax wage of $20 per hour but faces a constant 20 percent payroll tax. Under these conditions, the worker maximizes her utility by choosing to work 50 hours each week. The government proposes a negative income tax whereby everyone is given $300 each week and anyone can supplement her income further by working. To pay for the negative income tax, the payroll tax rate will be increased to 50 percent.a. On a single graph, draw the worker’s original budget line and her budget line under the negative income tax.b. Show that the worker will choose to work fewer hours if the negative income tax is a dopted.c. Will the worker’s utility be greater under the negative income tax?arrow_forwardSuppose the government implements a negative income tax plan to deal with the poverty problem. The negative income tax rate is set at 30%, and the break-even level of income is set at $20,000. 1. What is the guaranteed annual income level assured each family,. regardless of the amount of income earned by the family? 2. If a family earns $10,000 income, what will their negative income tax subsidy be? 3. If a family earns $30,000 income, what is their disposable income?arrow_forward
- Impact of higher taxes on labor income from now to next 5 years.arrow_forwardWhat is the potential impact of income taxes on labor (consider the income effect and substitution effect)? Do you think it would be better to have a proportional income tax (flat tax) or progressive income tax? Explain.arrow_forwardExplain all right as well as wrong options In 1986 Congress drastically cut the marginal tax rate on upper income levels from 50% to 28%. Empirical evidence analyzing the labor supply effects of the tax cut found that women in the high income tax bracket Select one: A. reduced their labor force participation and hours worked significantly because of a dominant income effect. B. increased both labor force participation and hours of work significantly. C. experienced offsetting substitution and income effects. D. did not respond in any significant way to the tax cut, as their high level of income ensured that they were already content with their labor supply choices.arrow_forward
- If older workers have a tax elasticity of labor supply equai to 014, by how much will their work activity decline when they reach the Social Security earnings test limit? (Recall that the Social Security earnings test limit is 50 percent. Assume explicit taxes of 20 percent below that limit. Use the midpoint method.) Instructions: Enter your response as a positive percent rounded to one decimal place. Do not include a negative sign () with your answer.arrow_forwardIn California, a welfare recipient is eligible for welfare benefits of $645. Benefits are reduced by 50 cents for every dollar of earnings. Consider Elizabeth, a resident of California, who can earn $10 per hour. a. If she works 10 hours, how much are her earnings, how much is her welfare benefit, and how much is her income? b. After Elizabeth works a certain number of hours, she does not receive any benefit at all. What is that number of hours? c. Use your answer to parts a and b to plot her budget constraint. d. Sketch a set of indifference curves consistent with Elizabeth's participating in the labor marketarrow_forwardRaka has 80 hours per week that she can allocate to work or leisure. Her job pays a wage rate of $20 per hour, but Raka is being taxed on her income in the following way. On the first $400 that she makes, she pays no tax. That is, for the first 20 hours she works, her net wage—what she takes home after taxes—is $20 per hour. On all income above $400, Raka pays a 75% tax. That is, for all hours above the first 20 hours, her net wage rate is only $5 per hour. Her indifference curves conform to the usual assumptions about consumer preferences. Raka’s optimal choice is to work 30 hours.Draw Raka’s time-allocation budget line for a typical week.arrow_forward
- Let us consider Amanda can work a maximum of 60 hours per week, at a wage rate of $5 per hour. Welfare benefits are fixed at $200 per week, with a 100 percent tax back on labour earnings. Finally, the earnings supplement equals half the difference between an individual’s labour earnings and the benchmark earnings of $450 per week. This supplement can be collected only if the individual forgoes welfare benefits and works a minimum of 30 hours per week. Draw Amanda's budget constraint, and analyze the work decision. (Make sure to graph)arrow_forwardIn the government of a country's budget the finance minister proposed to raise the tax on cigarettes. He also proposed to increase income tax on individuals earning more than $100,000 per annum. What possible welfare objective can you think of from these proposals?arrow_forwardPoverty Trap 7. The American Poverty Trap is a phrase used to describe the tendency for individuals below the poverty line to remain there due to the structure of America's safety-net income stabilization programs. 8. The issue is that federal and state benefits decline as a worker goes from being unemployed to becoming fully employed. As earned income increases, the amount of benefits fall. 9. Thus, the marginal benefit of working is increased income, but the marginal cost includes declining benefits, and a loss of leisure time. 10. Federal and state programs are designed so that as the worker nears the poverty line, the increase in income is matched by a decline in benefits. 11. Thus, the worker gains very little by working more! This structure is actually a disincentive to work. 12. What would be a better solution? End all poverty programs? Provide all citizens a poverty level income stipend? What do you think? What have you been told is the way to avoid being trapped in poverty? D…arrow_forward
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