Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP16608
Authors: Stefanie Stantcheva
Abstract: Income taxes are typically set to raise revenues and redistribute income at the lowest possible efficiency costs, which result from the distortions in individual behaviors that taxes entail. Individuals can respond along many margins, such as labor supply, tax avoidance and evasion, and geographic mobility. But one margin that taxes may affect — innovation — is less frequently considered. Conceptually, taxes reduce the expected net returns to innovation inputs and can reduce innovation. Much like other margins of responses to taxes, this efficiency cost must be taken into account. Innovation is done by a relatively small number of people, but it is nevertheless likely to have widespread benefits. While inventors may have divergent motivations, such as social recognition or the love of discovery, they also face an economic reality. How strongly innovation responds to taxes is an empirical question that has been the subject of a growing body of recent work. In this paper, I study how to account for innovation when setting personal income and capital taxation. I distinguish between two cases: one in which the government can set a differentiated tax on inventors and one in which the government is constrained to set the same tax on all agents. I provide a model that flexibly accounts for the spillovers generated by innovation and the non-pecuniary benefits inventors receive from innovation and derive tax formulas expressed in terms of estimable sufficient statistics. The second part of the paper discusses the empirical evidence on the effects of taxes on the quantity, quality, and location of innovation, as well as tax avoidance and income shifting done through innovation.
Keywords: innovation; income taxation; capital taxation; spillovers; inventors
JEL Codes: O3; O4; H2; H23; H24
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
Taxes (H29) | Expected net returns to innovation inputs (O39) |
Expected net returns to innovation inputs (O39) | Innovation efforts (O36) |
Taxes (H29) | Innovation efforts (O36) |
Taxes (H29) | Innovation landscape (O36) |
Personal and corporate income taxes (H24) | Quantity of innovation (O31) |
Tax rates (H29) | Location choices of inventors (R32) |
Corporate income taxes (H24) | Corporate inventors (O31) |