Taxing Top Incomes in a World of Ideas

Working Paper: NBER ID: w25725

Authors: Charles I. Jones

Abstract: This paper considers the taxation of top incomes when the following conditions apply: (i) new ideas drive economic growth, (ii) the reward for creating a successful innovation is a top income, and (iii) innovation cannot be perfectly targeted by a separate research subsidy --- think about the business methods of Walmart, the creation of Uber, or the "idea" of Amazon.com. These conditions lead to a new force affecting the optimal top tax rate: by slowing the creation of the new ideas that drive aggregate GDP, top income taxation reduces everyone's income, not just the income at the top. When the creation of ideas is the ultimate source of economic growth, this force sharply constrains both revenue-maximizing and welfare-maximizing top tax rates. For example, for extreme parameter values, maximizing the welfare of the middle class requires a negative top tax rate: the higher income that results from the subsidy to innovation more than makes up for the lost redistribution. More generally, the calibrated model suggests that incorporating ideas as a driver of economic growth cuts the optimal top marginal tax rate substantially relative to the basic Saez calculation.

Keywords: Taxation; Innovation; Economic Growth; Top Incomes

JEL Codes: E00; H20; O40


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
top income taxation (H24)innovation (O35)
innovation (O35)GDP per capita (O49)
top income taxation (H24)GDP per capita (O49)
top income taxation (H24)welfare-maximizing tax rate (H21)
innovation (O35)optimal top marginal tax rate (H21)

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