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Economics of the public sector / Joseph E. Stiglitz, Jay K. Rosengard.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: New York : W.W. Norton & Company, 2015.Edition: Fourth editionDescription: xxxii, 923 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780393925227 (pbk.)
  • 9780393937091
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 336.73 23 STI
Contents:
1. Defining Public Sector Responsibilities The Economic Role of Government The Mixed Economy of the United States Different Perspectives on the Role of Government An Impetus for Government Action: Market Failures Achieving Balance between the Public and Private Sectors The Emerging Consensus Thinking Like a Public Sector Economist Analyzing the Public Sector Economic Models Case Study Musgrave's Three Branches Normative versus Positive Economics Disagreements among Economists Differences in Views on How the Economy Behaves Disagreement over Values Case Study Public Sector Economics and the Global Economic Crisis Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 2. Measuring Public Sector Size What or Who Is the Government? Types of Government Activity Providing a Legal System Government Production Government's Influence on Private Production. Note continued: Government Purchases of Goods and Services Government Redistribution of Income Overview of Government Expenditures Gauging the Size of the Public Sector Growth in Expenditures and Their Changing Composition Case Study Estimating the Full Budgetary and Economic Costs of War Comparison of Expenditures across Countries Government Revenues Taxes and the Constitution Federal Taxation Today State and Local Government Revenues Comparison of Taxation across Countries Deficit Financing Playing Tricks with the Data on Government Activities Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 3. Market Efficiency The Invisible Hand of Competitive Markets Welfare Economics and Pareto Efficiency Case Study On the Prowl for Pareto Improvements Pareto Efficiency and Individualism The Fundamental Theorems of Welfare Economics Efficiency from the Perspective of a Single Market. Note continued: Analyzing Economic Efficiency The Utility Possibilities Curve Exchange Efficiency Production Efficiency Product Mix Efficiency Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 4. Market Failure Property Rights and Contract Enforcement Case Study Property Rights and Market Failures: The Tragedy of the Commons Revisited Market Failures and the Role of Government 1. Failure of Competition 2. Public Goods 3. Externalities 4. Incomplete Markets Case Study Student Loans: Incomplete Reform of an Incomplete Market 5. Information Failures 6. Unemployment, Inflation, and Disequilibrium Interrelationships of Market Failures Case Study Market Failures: Explanations or Excuses? Redistribution and Merit Goods Two Perspectives on the Role of Government Normative Analysis Positive Analysis Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems. Note continued: 5. Public Goods And Publicly Provided Private Goods Public Goods Public Goods and Market Failures Paying for Public Goods The Free Rider Problem Case Study Economists and the Free Rider Problem Pure and Impure Public Goods Case Study Property Rights, Excludability, and Externalities Publicly Provided Private Goods Rationing Devices for Publicly Provided Private Goods Efficiency Conditions for Public Goods Demand Curves for Public Goods Pareto Efficiency and Income Distribution Limitations on Income Redistribution and the Efficient Supply of Public Goods Distortionary Taxation and the Efficient Supply of Public Goods Efficient Government as a Public Good Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems Appendix: The Leftover Curve 6. Externalities And The Environment The Problem of Externalities Private Solutions to Externalities Internalizing Externalities. Note continued: The Coase Theorem Using the Legal System Case Study The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Failures of Private Solutions Public Sector Solutions to Externalities Case Study Double Dividend Market-Based Solutions Regulation Innovation Information Disclosure Compensation and Distribution Protecting the Environment: The Role of Government in Practice Air Water Land Concluding Remarks Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 7. Efficiency And Equity Efficiency and Distribution Trade-Offs Analyzing Social Choices Determining the Trade-Offs Evaluating the Trade-Offs Two Caveats Social Choices in Practice Measuring Benefits Ordinary and Compensated Demand Curves Consumer Surplus Measuring Aggregate Social Benefits Measuring Inefficiency Case Study Drawing a Poverty Line Quantifying Distributional Effects Case Study The Great Gatsby Curve. Note continued: Three Approaches to Social Choices The Compensation Principle Trade-Offs across Measures Weighted Net Benefits The Trade-Off between Efficiency and Fairness Revisited Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems Appendix: Alternative Measures of Inequality The Lorenz Curve The Dalton-Atkinson Measure 8. Public Production Of Goods And Services Natural Monopoly: Public Production of Private Goods The Basic Economics of Natural Monopoly Regulation and Taxation (Subsidies) No Government Intervention Government Failures Case Study Rent Control and Agricultural Price Supports: Case Studies in Government Failure Comparison of Efficiency in the Public and Private Sectors Case Study National Performance Review Sources of Inefficiency in the Public Sector Organizational Differences Individual Differences Bureaucratic Procedures and Risk Aversion Corporatization. Note continued: Case Study Privatizing Prisons A Growing Consensus on Government's Role in Production Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 9. Public Choice Public Mechanisms for Allocating Resources The Problem of Preference Revelation Individual Preferences for Public Goods The Problem of Aggregating Preferences Majority Voting and the Voting Paradox Arrow's Impossibility Theorem Single-Peaked Preferences and the Existence of a Majority Voting Equilibrium The Median Voter The Inefficiency of the Majority Voting Equilibrium The Two-Party System and the Median Voter Case Study Social Choice Theory Alternatives for Determining Public Goods Expenditures Lindahl Equilibrium Politics and Economics Why Do Individuals Vote? Elections and Special Interest Groups The Power of Special Interest Groups Other Aspects of the Political Process Case Study Campaign Finance Reform. Note continued: The Altruistic Politician? The Persistence of Inefficient Equilibrium Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems Appendix: New Preference-Revelation Mechanisms 10. Framework For Analysis Of Expenditure Policy Need for a Program Market Failures Case Study Higher Education in the United States Alternative Forms of Government Intervention The Importance of Particular Design Features Private Sector Responses to Government Programs Efficiency Consequences Income and Substitution Effects and Induced Inefficiency Distributional Consequences Evaluating the Distributional Consequences Case Study Incidence of Education Tax Credits Fairness and Distribution Equity-Efficiency Trade-Offs Public Policy Objectives Political Process Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 11. Evaluating Public Expenditure Private Cost-Benefit Analysis. Note continued: Present Discounted Value Social Cost-Benefit Analysis Consumer Surplus and the Decision to Undertake a Project Measuring Nonmonetized Costs and Benefits Valuing Time Valuing Life Case Study Children, Car Safety, and the Value of Life Valuing Natural Resources Shadow Prices and Market Prices Discount Rate for Social Cost-Benefit Analysis Case Study Climate Change and Discount Rates The Evaluation of Risk Risk Assessment Distributional Considerations Cost Effectiveness Post-Expenditure Evaluation: Assessing and Improving Government Performance Case Study Taking a Bite Out of Crime in the Big Apple Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 12. Defense, Research, And Technology Defense Expenditures The Value of Marginal Analysis Defense Strategy Case Study Game Theory, the Arms Race, and the Theory of Deterrence Case Study Converting Swords into Plowshares. Note continued: Increasing the Efficiency of the Defense Department Defense Procurement Defense Conversion Accounting and the Defense Department Research and Technology Market Failures Case Study The Scope of the Patent: Can the Human Body Be Patented? Government Direct Support Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 13. Health Care The Health Care System in the United States The Private Sector The Role of Government Other Expenditure Programs Tax Expenditures Rationale for a Role of Government in the Health Care Sector Imperfect Information Limited Competition Absence of Profit Motive Special Characteristics of the U.S. Market The Role of the Health Insurance Industry Case Study Medical Malpractice Insurance and Excessive Expenditures on Health Care Consequences of Inefficiencies in Health Care Markets Poverty, Incomplete Coverage, and the Role of Government. Note continued: Reforming Health Care Cost Containment Case Study Comprehensive Health Care Reform Extending Insurance Coverage Medicare Reform: Easing Long-Term Fiscal Strains Reforming Medicaid Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 14. Education The Structure of Education in the United States Federal Tax Subsidies to Private and Public Schools Why Is Education Publicly Provided and Publicly Financed? Is There a Market Failure? The Federal Role Issues and Controversies in Educational Policy Education Outcomes Do Expenditures Matter? School Vouchers: Choice and Competition Case Study Vouchers: The San Jose and Milwaukee Experiments School Decentralization Performance Standards: No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top Inequality Aid to Higher Education Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems. Note continued: Appendix: How Should Public Educational Funds Be Allocated? 15. Welfare Programs And The Redistribution Of Income A Brief Description of Major U.S. Welfare Programs AFDC and TANF Earned Income Tax Credit Food Stamps/SNAP Medicaid Housing Other Programs Rationale for Government Welfare Programs Dimensions of the Problem Analytic Issues Labor Supply Cash versus In-Kind Redistribution Inefficiencies from In-Kind Benefits Are In-Kind Benefits Paternalistic? Categorical versus Broad-Based Aid Is Means Testing Objectionable in Its Own Right? Other Distortions Case Study Conditional Cash Transfer Programs Welfare Reform: Integration of Programs The Welfare Reform Bill of 1996 Block Granting Analytics of State Responses to Block Grants Time Limits Mandatory Work The Welfare Reform Debate of 1996 Case Study The Person or the Place? Concluding Remarks Review and Practice. Note continued: Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 16. Social Insurance The Social Security System Social Security, Private Insurance, and Market Failures High Transactions Costs Risk Mitigation Lack of Indexing: The Inability of Private Markets to Insure Social Risks Adverse Selection, Differential Risks, and the Cost of Insurance Moral Hazard and Social Security Retirement Insurance as a Merit Good Social Security, Forced Savings, and Individual Choice Is There a Need to Reform Social Security? The Nature of the Fiscal Crisis Savings Labor Supply The Rate of Return Inequities Reforming Social Security Reducing Expenditures Increasing Revenues Structural Reforms Case Study Social Security Abroad Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 17. Introduction To Taxation Background Forms of Taxation Changing Patterns of Taxation in the United States. Note continued: Comparisons with Other Countries The Five Desirable Characteristics of Any Tax System Economic Efficiency Administrative Costs Case Study Corrective Taxes and the Double Dividend Flexibility Transparent Political Responsibility Fairness Case Study Corruption-Resistant Tax Systems General Framework for Choosing among Tax Systems Utilitarianism Rawlsian Social Welfare Function Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 18. Tax Incidence Tax Incidence in Competitive Markets Effect of Tax at the Level of a Firm Impact on Market Equilibrium Does It Matter Whether the Tax Is Levied on Consumers or on Producers? Case Study The Incidence of Government Benefits Ad Valorem versus Specific Taxes The Effect of Elasticity Taxation of Factors Case Study The Philadelphia Wage Tax Tax Incidence in Environments without Perfect Competition. Note continued: Relationship between the Change in the Price and the Tax Ad Valorem versus Specific Taxes Tax Incidence in Oligopolies Equivalent Taxes Income Tax and Value-Added Tax Equivalence of Consumption and Wage Taxes Equivalence of Lifetime Consumption and Lifetime Income Taxes A Caveat on Equivalence Other Factors Affecting Tax Incidence Tax Incidence under Partial and General Equilibrium Case Study Behavioral Economics, Managerial Capitalism, and Tax Incidence Short-Run versus Long-Run Effects Open versus Closed Economy Associated Policy Changes Case Study Tax Incidence of Specific Tax Provisions Incidence of Taxes in the United States Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems Appendix: Comparison of the Effects of an Ad Valorem and Specific Commodity Tax on a Monopolist 19. Taxation And Economic Efficiency Effect of Taxes Borne by Consumers. Note continued: Substitution and Income Effects Quantifying the Distortions Measuring Deadweight Loss Using Indifference Curves Measuring Deadweight Loss Using Compensated Demand Curves Calculating the Deadweight Loss Effect of Taxes Borne by Producers Effects of Taxes Borne Partly by Consumers, Partly by Producers Taxation of Savings Quantifying the Effects of an Interest Income Tax Taxation of Labor Income Effects of Progressive Taxation Case Study The 1993, 2001, and 2003 Tax Reforms Secondary Labor Force Participants Measuring the Effects of Taxes on Labor Supplied Statistical Techniques Using Market Data Experiments Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems Appendix: Measuring the Welfare Cost of User Fees 20. Optimal Taxation Two Fallacies of Optimal Taxation The Fallacy of Counting Distortions Misinterpretations of the Theory of the Second Best. Note continued: Optimal and Pareto Efficient Taxation Lump-Sum Taxes Why Impose Distortionary Taxes? Case Study Estimating the Optimal Tax Rate Case Study Rent Seeking, Inequality, and Optimal Taxation Designing an Income Tax System Why Does More Progressivity Imply More Deadweight Loss? A Diagrammatic Analysis of the Deadweight Loss of Progressive Taxation Choosing among Flat-Rate Tax Schedules Case Study The Tax Increase on Upper-Income Individuals: A Pareto Inefficient Tax? General Equilibrium Effects Case Study Flat-Rate Taxes Arrive on the Political Scene Differential Taxation Ramsey Taxes Differential Commodity Taxes in Advanced Countries with Progressive Income Taxes Interest Income Taxation and Commodity Taxation Taxes on Producers The Dependence of Optimal Tax Structure on the Set of Available Taxes Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems. Note continued: Appendix A: Deriving Ramsey Taxes on Commodities Appendix B: Derivation of Ramsey Formula for Linear Demand Schedule 21. Taxation Of Capital Should Capital Be Taxed? Relationship among Consumption Taxes, a Wage Tax, and Exempting Capital Income from Taxation Equity Issues Efficiency Arguments Administrative Problems Effects on Savings and Investment Effects of Reduced Savings in a Closed Economy The Distinction between Savings and Investment National Savings and Budget Neutrality Effects of Reduced Savings in an Open Economy Impact on Risk Taking Why Capital Taxation with Full Loss Deductibility May Increase Risk Taking Case Study Tax Incentives for Risk Taking Why Capital Taxation May Reduce Risk Taking Measuring Changes in Asset Values Capital Gains Case Study Equity and the Reduction in Capital Gains Taxes Depreciation Case Study Distortions from Depreciation Neutral Taxation. Note continued: Inflation Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 22. The Personal Income Tax Outline of the U.S. Income Tax Legislated versus Actual Tax Rates Case Study A Loophole in the Earned Income Tax Credit? Other Taxes Principles Behind the U.S. Income Tax The Income-Based Principle and the Haig-Simons Definition The Progressivity Principle The Family-Based Principle The Annual Measure of Income Principle Practical Problems in Implementing an Income Tax System Determining Income Timing Personal Deductions Deductions versus Credits Case Study Temporary Tax Changes Special Treatment of Capital Income Housing Savings for Retirement Interest on State and Municipal Bonds Capital Gains Concluding Remarks Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 23. The Corporation Income Tax The Basic Features of the Corporation Income Tax. Note continued: The Incidence of the Corporation Income Tax and Its Effect on Efficiency The Corporation Income Tax as a Tax on Income from Capital in the Corporate Sector Shifting of the Corporate Tax in the Long Run The Corporation Tax for a Firm without Borrowing Constraints Incidence of the Corporation Income Tax with Credit-Constrained Firms The Corporation Tax as a Tax on Monopoly Profits Managerial Firms: An Alternative Perspective Depreciation Combined Effects of Individual and Corporate Income Tax Distributing Funds: The Basic Principles The Dividend Paradox Mergers, Acquisitions, and Share Repurchases Does the Corporate Tax Bias Firms toward Debt Finance? Distortions in Organizational Form Arising because Some Firms Do Not Have Taxable Income Are Corporations Tax Preferred? Calculating Effective Tax Rates The Corporation Tax as Economic Policy. Note continued: Case Study The Proposed Incremental Investment Tax Credit of 1993: An Idea before Its Time? Taxation of Multinationals Case Study Foreign Income and the Corporation Income Tax Should There Be a Corporation Income Tax? Why Is There a Corporate Income Tax at All? Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 24.A Student's Guide To Tax Avoidance Principles of Tax Avoidance Postponement of Taxes Shifting and Tax Arbitrage Case Study Shorting against the Box Tax Shelters Case Study The Economics of Tax Avoidance Who Gains from Tax Shelters Middle-Class Tax Shelters Tax Reform and Tax Avoidance The 1986 Tax Reform Minimum Tax on Individuals Subsequent Tax Acts Equity, Efficiency, and Tax Reform Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 25. Reform Of The Tax System Fairness Horizontal Equity Issues Vertical Equity Efficiency. Note continued: Case Study Marginal Tax Rates and the 1986 Tax Reform Base Broadening Interaction of Fairness and Efficiency Concerns Simplifying the Tax Code Assessing Complexity Increasing Compliance Reducing Tax Avoidance Reducing Administrative and Compliance Costs Sources of Complexity The 1986 Tax Reform Transition Issues and the Politics of Tax Reform Tax Reforms for the Twenty-First Century Reforms within the Current Framework Major New Reforms Case Study Ordinary Income versus Capital Gains Case Study IRAs and National Savings Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 26. Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations The Division of Responsibilities Other Interaction between the Federal Government and the State and Local Governments The Size of Financial Transfers Case Study Unfunded Mandates Principles of Fiscal Federalism National Public Goods versus Local Public Goods. Note continued: Case Study International Public Goods Do Local Communities Provide Local Public Goods Efficiently? Tiebout Hypothesis Market Failures Redistribution Other Arguments for Local Provision Production versus Finance Effectiveness of Federal Categorical Aid to Local Communities The Federal Tax System and Local Expenditures Concluding Remarks Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 27. Subnational Taxes And Expenditures Tax Incidence Applied to Local Public Finance Local Capital Taxes Property Tax Case Study The U.S. Property Tax Revolt Income, Wage, and Sales Taxes Distortions Limitations on the Ability to Redistribute Income Rent Control Capitalization Incentives for Pension Schemes Choice of Debt versus Tax Financing Short-Run versus Long-Run Capitalization Who Benefits From Local Public Goods? The Capitalization Hypothesis. Note continued: Absolute versus Relative Capitalization The Use of Changes in Land Rents to Measure Benefits Testing the Capitalization Hypothesis Public Choice at the Local Level Problems of Multijurisdictional Taxation Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems 28. Fiscal Deficits And Government Debt The U.S. Deficit Problem since the 1980s Sources of the Deficit Problem Factors Not Contributing to the Deficit Problem Success in Taming the Deficit: The Experience of the 1990s Case Study Measuring Budget Deficits: What's Large, What's Real, and What's Right? Consequences of Government Deficits How Deficits Affect Future Generations When the Economy Is at Full Employment Alternative Perspectives on the Burden of the Debt Case Study Austerity in a Recession: Expansionary or Contractionary? Improving the Budgetary Process Budget Enforcement Act and Scoring Capital Budgets. Note continued: Other Strategies The Long-Term Problem: Entitlements and the Aged Review and Practice Summary Key Concepts Questions and Problems
Summary: What should be the role of government in society? How should it design its programs? How should tax systems be designed to promote both efficiency and fairness? Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz and new co-author Jay Rosengard use their first-hand policy-advising experience to address these key issues of public-sector economics in this modern and accessible Fourth Edition
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General Books General Books CUTN Central Library Social Sciences Non-fiction 336.73 STI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 50856

Includes bibliographical references (pages 880 - 892) and index.

1. Defining Public Sector Responsibilities
The Economic Role of Government
The Mixed Economy of the United States
Different Perspectives on the Role of Government
An Impetus for Government Action: Market Failures
Achieving Balance between the Public and Private Sectors
The Emerging Consensus
Thinking Like a Public Sector Economist
Analyzing the Public Sector
Economic Models
Case Study Musgrave's Three Branches
Normative versus Positive Economics
Disagreements among Economists
Differences in Views on How the Economy Behaves
Disagreement over Values
Case Study Public Sector Economics and the Global Economic Crisis
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
2. Measuring Public Sector Size
What or Who Is the Government?
Types of Government Activity
Providing a Legal System
Government Production
Government's Influence on Private Production. Note continued: Government Purchases of Goods and Services
Government Redistribution of Income
Overview of Government Expenditures
Gauging the Size of the Public Sector
Growth in Expenditures and Their Changing Composition
Case Study Estimating the Full Budgetary and Economic Costs of War
Comparison of Expenditures across Countries
Government Revenues
Taxes and the Constitution
Federal Taxation Today
State and Local Government Revenues
Comparison of Taxation across Countries
Deficit Financing
Playing Tricks with the Data on Government Activities
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
3. Market Efficiency
The Invisible Hand of Competitive Markets
Welfare Economics and Pareto Efficiency
Case Study On the Prowl for Pareto Improvements
Pareto Efficiency and Individualism
The Fundamental Theorems of Welfare Economics
Efficiency from the Perspective of a Single Market. Note continued: Analyzing Economic Efficiency
The Utility Possibilities Curve
Exchange Efficiency
Production Efficiency
Product Mix Efficiency
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
4. Market Failure
Property Rights and Contract Enforcement
Case Study Property Rights and Market Failures: The Tragedy of the Commons Revisited
Market Failures and the Role of Government
1. Failure of Competition
2. Public Goods
3. Externalities
4. Incomplete Markets
Case Study Student Loans: Incomplete Reform of an Incomplete Market
5. Information Failures
6. Unemployment, Inflation, and Disequilibrium
Interrelationships of Market Failures
Case Study Market Failures: Explanations or Excuses?
Redistribution and Merit Goods
Two Perspectives on the Role of Government
Normative Analysis
Positive Analysis
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems. Note continued: 5. Public Goods And Publicly Provided Private Goods
Public Goods
Public Goods and Market Failures
Paying for Public Goods
The Free Rider Problem
Case Study Economists and the Free Rider Problem
Pure and Impure Public Goods
Case Study Property Rights, Excludability, and Externalities
Publicly Provided Private Goods
Rationing Devices for Publicly Provided Private Goods
Efficiency Conditions for Public Goods
Demand Curves for Public Goods
Pareto Efficiency and Income Distribution
Limitations on Income Redistribution and the Efficient Supply of Public Goods
Distortionary Taxation and the Efficient Supply of Public Goods
Efficient Government as a Public Good
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
Appendix: The Leftover Curve
6. Externalities And The Environment
The Problem of Externalities
Private Solutions to Externalities
Internalizing Externalities. Note continued: The Coase Theorem
Using the Legal System
Case Study The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
Failures of Private Solutions
Public Sector Solutions to Externalities
Case Study Double Dividend
Market-Based Solutions
Regulation
Innovation
Information Disclosure
Compensation and Distribution
Protecting the Environment: The Role of Government in Practice
Air
Water
Land
Concluding Remarks
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
7. Efficiency And Equity
Efficiency and Distribution Trade-Offs
Analyzing Social Choices
Determining the Trade-Offs
Evaluating the Trade-Offs
Two Caveats
Social Choices in Practice
Measuring Benefits
Ordinary and Compensated Demand Curves
Consumer Surplus
Measuring Aggregate Social Benefits
Measuring Inefficiency
Case Study Drawing a Poverty Line
Quantifying Distributional Effects
Case Study The Great Gatsby Curve. Note continued: Three Approaches to Social Choices
The Compensation Principle
Trade-Offs across Measures
Weighted Net Benefits
The Trade-Off between Efficiency and Fairness Revisited
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
Appendix: Alternative Measures of Inequality
The Lorenz Curve
The Dalton-Atkinson Measure
8. Public Production Of Goods And Services
Natural Monopoly: Public Production of Private Goods
The Basic Economics of Natural Monopoly
Regulation and Taxation (Subsidies)
No Government Intervention
Government Failures
Case Study Rent Control and Agricultural Price Supports: Case Studies in Government Failure
Comparison of Efficiency in the Public and Private Sectors
Case Study National Performance Review
Sources of Inefficiency in the Public Sector
Organizational Differences
Individual Differences
Bureaucratic Procedures and Risk Aversion
Corporatization. Note continued: Case Study Privatizing Prisons
A Growing Consensus on Government's Role in Production
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
9. Public Choice
Public Mechanisms for Allocating Resources
The Problem of Preference Revelation
Individual Preferences for Public Goods
The Problem of Aggregating Preferences
Majority Voting and the Voting Paradox
Arrow's Impossibility Theorem
Single-Peaked Preferences and the Existence of a Majority Voting Equilibrium
The Median Voter
The Inefficiency of the Majority Voting Equilibrium
The Two-Party System and the Median Voter
Case Study Social Choice Theory
Alternatives for Determining Public Goods Expenditures
Lindahl Equilibrium
Politics and Economics
Why Do Individuals Vote?
Elections and Special Interest Groups
The Power of Special Interest Groups
Other Aspects of the Political Process
Case Study Campaign Finance Reform. Note continued: The Altruistic Politician?
The Persistence of Inefficient Equilibrium
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
Appendix: New Preference-Revelation Mechanisms
10. Framework For Analysis Of Expenditure Policy
Need for a Program
Market Failures
Case Study Higher Education in the United States
Alternative Forms of Government Intervention
The Importance of Particular Design Features
Private Sector Responses to Government Programs
Efficiency Consequences
Income and Substitution Effects and Induced Inefficiency
Distributional Consequences
Evaluating the Distributional Consequences
Case Study Incidence of Education Tax Credits
Fairness and Distribution
Equity-Efficiency Trade-Offs
Public Policy Objectives
Political Process
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
11. Evaluating Public Expenditure
Private Cost-Benefit Analysis. Note continued: Present Discounted Value
Social Cost-Benefit Analysis
Consumer Surplus and the Decision to Undertake a Project
Measuring Nonmonetized Costs and Benefits
Valuing Time
Valuing Life
Case Study Children, Car Safety, and the Value of Life
Valuing Natural Resources
Shadow Prices and Market Prices
Discount Rate for Social Cost-Benefit Analysis
Case Study Climate Change and Discount Rates
The Evaluation of Risk
Risk Assessment
Distributional Considerations
Cost Effectiveness
Post-Expenditure Evaluation: Assessing and Improving Government Performance
Case Study Taking a Bite Out of Crime in the Big Apple
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
12. Defense, Research, And Technology
Defense Expenditures
The Value of Marginal Analysis
Defense Strategy
Case Study Game Theory, the Arms Race, and the Theory of Deterrence
Case Study Converting Swords into Plowshares. Note continued: Increasing the Efficiency of the Defense Department
Defense Procurement
Defense Conversion
Accounting and the Defense Department
Research and Technology
Market Failures
Case Study The Scope of the Patent: Can the Human Body Be Patented?
Government Direct Support
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
13. Health Care
The Health Care System in the United States
The Private Sector
The Role of Government
Other Expenditure Programs
Tax Expenditures
Rationale for a Role of Government in the Health Care Sector
Imperfect Information
Limited Competition
Absence of Profit Motive
Special Characteristics of the U.S. Market
The Role of the Health Insurance Industry
Case Study Medical Malpractice
Insurance and Excessive Expenditures on Health Care
Consequences of Inefficiencies in Health Care Markets
Poverty, Incomplete Coverage, and the Role of Government. Note continued: Reforming Health Care
Cost Containment
Case Study Comprehensive Health Care Reform
Extending Insurance Coverage
Medicare Reform: Easing Long-Term Fiscal Strains
Reforming Medicaid
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
14. Education
The Structure of Education in the United States
Federal Tax Subsidies to Private and Public Schools
Why Is Education Publicly Provided and Publicly Financed?
Is There a Market Failure?
The Federal Role
Issues and Controversies in Educational Policy
Education Outcomes
Do Expenditures Matter?
School Vouchers: Choice and Competition
Case Study Vouchers: The San Jose and Milwaukee Experiments
School Decentralization
Performance Standards: No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top
Inequality
Aid to Higher Education
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems. Note continued: Appendix: How Should Public Educational Funds Be Allocated?
15. Welfare Programs And The Redistribution Of Income
A Brief Description of Major U.S. Welfare Programs
AFDC and TANF
Earned Income Tax Credit
Food Stamps/SNAP
Medicaid
Housing
Other Programs
Rationale for Government Welfare Programs
Dimensions of the Problem
Analytic Issues
Labor Supply
Cash versus In-Kind Redistribution
Inefficiencies from In-Kind Benefits
Are In-Kind Benefits Paternalistic?
Categorical versus Broad-Based Aid
Is Means Testing Objectionable in Its Own Right?
Other Distortions
Case Study Conditional Cash Transfer Programs
Welfare Reform: Integration of Programs
The Welfare Reform Bill of 1996
Block Granting
Analytics of State Responses to Block Grants
Time Limits
Mandatory Work
The Welfare Reform Debate of 1996
Case Study The Person or the Place?
Concluding Remarks
Review and Practice. Note continued: Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
16. Social Insurance
The Social Security System
Social Security, Private Insurance, and Market Failures
High Transactions Costs
Risk Mitigation
Lack of Indexing: The Inability of Private Markets to Insure Social Risks
Adverse Selection, Differential Risks, and the Cost of Insurance
Moral Hazard and Social Security
Retirement Insurance as a Merit Good
Social Security, Forced Savings, and Individual Choice
Is There a Need to Reform Social Security?
The Nature of the Fiscal Crisis
Savings
Labor Supply
The Rate of Return
Inequities
Reforming Social Security
Reducing Expenditures
Increasing Revenues
Structural Reforms
Case Study Social Security Abroad
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
17. Introduction To Taxation
Background
Forms of Taxation
Changing Patterns of Taxation in the United States. Note continued: Comparisons with Other Countries
The Five Desirable Characteristics of Any Tax System
Economic Efficiency
Administrative Costs
Case Study Corrective Taxes and the Double Dividend
Flexibility
Transparent Political Responsibility
Fairness
Case Study Corruption-Resistant Tax Systems
General Framework for Choosing among Tax Systems
Utilitarianism
Rawlsian Social Welfare Function
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
18. Tax Incidence
Tax Incidence in Competitive Markets
Effect of Tax at the Level of a Firm
Impact on Market Equilibrium
Does It Matter Whether the Tax Is Levied on Consumers or on Producers?
Case Study The Incidence of Government Benefits
Ad Valorem versus Specific Taxes
The Effect of Elasticity
Taxation of Factors
Case Study The Philadelphia Wage Tax
Tax Incidence in Environments without Perfect Competition. Note continued: Relationship between the Change in the Price and the Tax
Ad Valorem versus Specific Taxes
Tax Incidence in Oligopolies
Equivalent Taxes
Income Tax and Value-Added Tax
Equivalence of Consumption and Wage Taxes
Equivalence of Lifetime Consumption and Lifetime Income Taxes
A Caveat on Equivalence
Other Factors Affecting Tax Incidence
Tax Incidence under Partial and General Equilibrium
Case Study Behavioral Economics, Managerial Capitalism, and Tax Incidence
Short-Run versus Long-Run Effects
Open versus Closed Economy
Associated Policy Changes
Case Study Tax Incidence of Specific Tax Provisions
Incidence of Taxes in the United States
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
Appendix: Comparison of the Effects of an Ad Valorem and Specific Commodity Tax on a Monopolist
19. Taxation And Economic Efficiency
Effect of Taxes Borne by Consumers. Note continued: Substitution and Income Effects
Quantifying the Distortions
Measuring Deadweight Loss Using Indifference Curves
Measuring Deadweight Loss Using Compensated Demand Curves
Calculating the Deadweight Loss
Effect of Taxes Borne by Producers
Effects of Taxes Borne Partly by Consumers, Partly by Producers
Taxation of Savings
Quantifying the Effects of an Interest Income Tax
Taxation of Labor Income
Effects of Progressive Taxation
Case Study The 1993, 2001, and 2003 Tax Reforms
Secondary Labor Force Participants
Measuring the Effects of Taxes on Labor Supplied
Statistical Techniques Using Market Data
Experiments
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
Appendix: Measuring the Welfare Cost of User Fees
20. Optimal Taxation
Two Fallacies of Optimal Taxation
The Fallacy of Counting Distortions
Misinterpretations of the Theory of the Second Best. Note continued: Optimal and Pareto Efficient Taxation
Lump-Sum Taxes
Why Impose Distortionary Taxes?
Case Study Estimating the Optimal Tax Rate
Case Study Rent Seeking, Inequality, and Optimal Taxation
Designing an Income Tax System
Why Does More Progressivity Imply More Deadweight Loss?
A Diagrammatic Analysis of the Deadweight Loss of Progressive Taxation
Choosing among Flat-Rate Tax Schedules
Case Study The
Tax Increase on Upper-Income Individuals: A Pareto Inefficient Tax?
General Equilibrium Effects
Case Study Flat-Rate Taxes Arrive on the Political Scene
Differential Taxation
Ramsey Taxes
Differential Commodity Taxes in Advanced Countries with Progressive Income Taxes
Interest Income Taxation and Commodity Taxation
Taxes on Producers
The Dependence of Optimal Tax Structure on the Set of Available Taxes
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems. Note continued: Appendix A: Deriving Ramsey Taxes on Commodities
Appendix B: Derivation of Ramsey Formula for Linear Demand Schedule
21. Taxation Of Capital
Should Capital Be Taxed?
Relationship among Consumption Taxes, a Wage Tax, and Exempting Capital Income from Taxation
Equity Issues
Efficiency Arguments
Administrative Problems
Effects on Savings and Investment
Effects of Reduced Savings in a Closed Economy
The Distinction between Savings and Investment
National Savings and Budget Neutrality
Effects of Reduced Savings in an Open Economy
Impact on Risk Taking
Why Capital Taxation with Full Loss Deductibility May Increase Risk Taking
Case Study Tax Incentives for Risk Taking
Why Capital Taxation May Reduce Risk Taking
Measuring Changes in Asset Values
Capital Gains
Case Study Equity and the Reduction in Capital Gains Taxes
Depreciation
Case Study Distortions from Depreciation
Neutral Taxation. Note continued: Inflation
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
22. The Personal Income Tax
Outline of the U.S. Income Tax
Legislated versus Actual Tax Rates
Case Study A Loophole in the Earned Income Tax Credit?
Other Taxes
Principles Behind the U.S. Income Tax
The Income-Based Principle and the Haig-Simons Definition
The Progressivity Principle
The Family-Based Principle
The Annual Measure of Income Principle
Practical Problems in Implementing an Income Tax System
Determining Income
Timing
Personal Deductions
Deductions versus Credits
Case Study Temporary Tax Changes
Special Treatment of Capital Income
Housing
Savings for Retirement
Interest on State and Municipal Bonds
Capital Gains
Concluding Remarks
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
23. The Corporation Income Tax
The Basic Features of the Corporation Income Tax. Note continued: The Incidence of the Corporation Income Tax and Its Effect on Efficiency
The Corporation Income Tax as a Tax on Income from Capital in the Corporate Sector
Shifting of the Corporate Tax in the Long Run
The Corporation Tax for a Firm without Borrowing Constraints
Incidence of the Corporation Income Tax with Credit-Constrained Firms
The Corporation Tax as a Tax on Monopoly Profits
Managerial Firms: An Alternative Perspective
Depreciation
Combined Effects of Individual and Corporate Income Tax
Distributing Funds: The Basic Principles
The Dividend Paradox
Mergers, Acquisitions, and Share Repurchases
Does the Corporate Tax Bias Firms toward Debt Finance?
Distortions in Organizational Form Arising because Some Firms Do Not Have Taxable Income
Are Corporations Tax Preferred?
Calculating Effective Tax Rates
The Corporation Tax as Economic Policy. Note continued: Case Study The Proposed Incremental Investment Tax Credit of 1993: An Idea before Its Time?
Taxation of Multinationals
Case Study Foreign Income and the Corporation Income Tax
Should There Be a Corporation Income Tax?
Why Is There a Corporate Income Tax at All?
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
24.A Student's Guide To Tax Avoidance
Principles of Tax Avoidance
Postponement of Taxes
Shifting and Tax Arbitrage
Case Study Shorting against the Box
Tax Shelters
Case Study The Economics of Tax Avoidance
Who Gains from Tax Shelters
Middle-Class Tax Shelters
Tax Reform and Tax Avoidance
The 1986 Tax Reform
Minimum Tax on Individuals
Subsequent Tax Acts
Equity, Efficiency, and Tax Reform
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
25. Reform Of The Tax System
Fairness
Horizontal Equity Issues
Vertical Equity
Efficiency. Note continued: Case Study Marginal Tax Rates and the 1986 Tax Reform
Base Broadening
Interaction of Fairness and Efficiency Concerns
Simplifying the Tax Code
Assessing Complexity
Increasing Compliance
Reducing Tax Avoidance
Reducing Administrative and Compliance Costs
Sources of Complexity
The 1986 Tax Reform
Transition Issues and the Politics of Tax Reform
Tax Reforms for the Twenty-First Century
Reforms within the Current Framework
Major New Reforms
Case Study Ordinary Income versus Capital Gains
Case Study IRAs and National Savings
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
26. Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations
The Division of Responsibilities
Other Interaction between the Federal Government and the State and Local Governments
The Size of Financial Transfers
Case Study Unfunded Mandates
Principles of Fiscal Federalism
National Public Goods versus Local Public Goods. Note continued: Case Study International Public Goods
Do Local Communities Provide Local Public Goods Efficiently?
Tiebout Hypothesis
Market Failures
Redistribution
Other Arguments for Local Provision
Production versus Finance
Effectiveness of Federal Categorical Aid to Local Communities
The Federal Tax System and Local Expenditures
Concluding Remarks
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
27. Subnational Taxes And Expenditures
Tax Incidence Applied to Local Public Finance
Local Capital Taxes
Property Tax
Case Study The U.S. Property Tax Revolt
Income, Wage, and Sales Taxes
Distortions
Limitations on the Ability to Redistribute Income
Rent Control
Capitalization
Incentives for Pension Schemes
Choice of Debt versus Tax Financing
Short-Run versus Long-Run Capitalization
Who Benefits From Local Public Goods? The Capitalization Hypothesis. Note continued: Absolute versus Relative Capitalization
The Use of Changes in Land Rents to Measure Benefits
Testing the Capitalization Hypothesis
Public Choice at the Local Level
Problems of Multijurisdictional Taxation
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems
28. Fiscal Deficits And Government Debt
The U.S. Deficit Problem since the 1980s
Sources of the Deficit Problem
Factors Not Contributing to the Deficit Problem
Success in Taming the Deficit: The Experience of the 1990s
Case Study Measuring Budget Deficits: What's Large, What's Real, and What's Right?
Consequences of Government Deficits
How Deficits Affect Future Generations When the Economy Is at Full Employment
Alternative Perspectives on the Burden of the Debt
Case Study Austerity in a Recession: Expansionary or Contractionary?
Improving the Budgetary Process
Budget Enforcement Act and Scoring
Capital Budgets. Note continued: Other Strategies
The Long-Term Problem: Entitlements and the Aged
Review and Practice
Summary
Key Concepts
Questions and Problems

What should be the role of government in society? How should it design its programs? How should tax systems be designed to promote both efficiency and fairness? Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz and new co-author Jay Rosengard use their first-hand policy-advising experience to address these key issues of public-sector economics in this modern and accessible Fourth Edition

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