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  • 2016
  • Working Paper
  • HBS Working Paper Series

Popular Acceptance of Inequality Due to Innate Brute Luck and Support for Classical Benefit-Based Taxation

By: Matthew C. Weinzierl
  • Format:Print
  • | Language:English
  • | Pages:31
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Abstract

U.S. survey respondents' views on distributive justice are shown to differ in two specific, related ways from what is conventionally assumed in modern optimal tax research. A large share of respondents, and in some cases a large majority, resist the full equalization of inequality due to brute luck that standard analyses would recommend. Related, a similar share prefer a classical benefit-based logic for the assignment of taxes over the conventional logic of diminishing marginal social welfare. Moreover, these two views are linked: respondents who more strongly resist equalization are more likely to prefer the classical benefit-based principle. Together, these results suggest that a large share of the American public views the allocation of pre-tax incomes as relevant to optimal tax policy and—at least in part—justly deserved unless proven otherwise, judgments that are inconsistent with standard welfarist objectives.

Keywords

Equality and Inequality; Attitudes; Taxation; Theory; United States

Citation

Weinzierl, Matthew C. "Popular Acceptance of Inequality Due to Innate Brute Luck and Support for Classical Benefit-Based Taxation." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 16-104, March 2016. (Revised July 2016. Also NBER Working Paper Series, No. 22462, July 2016. Also see Notes on Fortune article. Accepted for publication by the Journal of Public Economics.)

Supplemental Information

Notes on Fortune article
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About The Author

Matthew C. Weinzierl

Business, Government and the International Economy
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Related Work

    • 2016
    • Faculty Research

    Popular Acceptance of Inequality Due to Innate Brute Luck and Support for Classical Benefit-Based Taxation

    By: Matthew C. Weinzierl
Related Work
  • Popular Acceptance of Inequality Due to Innate Brute Luck and Support for Classical Benefit-Based Taxation By: Matthew C. Weinzierl
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