This paper presents a general formalism for calculating the effect of taxes on income distribution, and the resultant effect on income inequality. We first derive a closed form expression for income inequality (defined from a Lorenz curve) in terms of the income density function. By way of illustration, we use this expression to calculate the effect of a proportional and a lump sum tax on income inequality in a simple exponential income distribution. The results show that the effect of a lump sum tax imposed after a proportional tax is a function of the proportional tax rate, even though the proportional tax itself does not change inequality.
MLA
Levine, Daniel B., and Neil M. Singer. “The Mathematical Relation Between the Income Density Function and the Measurement of Income Inequality.” Econometrica, vol. 38, .no 2, Econometric Society, 1970, pp. 324-330, https://www.jstor.org/stable/1913013
Chicago
Levine, Daniel B., and Neil M. Singer. “The Mathematical Relation Between the Income Density Function and the Measurement of Income Inequality.” Econometrica, 38, .no 2, (Econometric Society: 1970), 324-330. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1913013
APA
Levine, D. B., & Singer, N. M. (1970). The Mathematical Relation Between the Income Density Function and the Measurement of Income Inequality. Econometrica, 38(2), 324-330. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1913013
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