Monday, June 7, 2010

Mankiw On Pigovian Taxes

I believe, given the costs to Malaysian society that come from excess consumption of sugar, that not only should subsidies and price controls on it be dropped but that it should also be taxed as well. The argument goes double for petrol, as the impact on society and the environment are that much greater.

N Gregory Mankiw provides both sides of the debate in this NYT article (excerpts):

Can a Soda Tax Save Us From Ourselves?

AS governments large and small face sizable budget shortfalls, policy makers are looking for ways to raise tax revenue that will do the least harm and, perhaps, even a bit of good. One idea keeps popping up: a tax on soda and other sugary drinks…

…Economists have often advocated taxing consumption rather than income, on the grounds that consumption taxes do less to discourage saving, investment and economic growth. Hence the case for broad-based consumption taxes, like a value-added tax. The main issue for the soda tax, however, is whether certain forms of consumption should be singled out for particularly high levels of taxation.

One argument for specific taxes is that consuming certain products has an adverse impact on bystanders. Economists call these effects negative externalities.

Taxes on gasoline can be justified along these lines. Whenever you go out for a drive, you are to some degree committing an antisocial act. You make the roads more congested, increasing the commuting time of your neighbors. You increase the likelihood that other drivers will end up in accidents. And the gasoline you burn adds to pollution, including the greenhouse gases thought to cause global climate change.

Many economists advocate gasoline taxes so that drivers will internalize these negative externalities. That is, by raising the price of gasoline, a tax would induce consumers to take into account the harm they cause after making their purchases. One prominent study added up all the externalities associated with driving and concluded that the optimal gasoline tax is over $2 a gallon, about five times the current level (combining the federal and a typical state’s levies) and about the tax rate in many European countries.

Applying that logic to other consumer goods, however, is not as straightforward. Consider cigarettes. They are among the economy’s most heavily taxed products, as governments try to discourage people from smoking. Yet the case for such a policy cannot rely on a conventional externality argument.

When a person sits at home and smokes two packs a day, the main adverse impact is on his or her own health. And even if second-hand smoke is a concern, that problem is most naturally addressed within the household, not at the state or federal level.

Sometimes, advocates of “sin” taxes contend that consumers of certain products impose adverse budgetary externalities on the rest of us — that if the consumption induces, say, smoking- or obesity-related illness, it raises health care costs, which we all pay for through higher taxes or insurance premiums.

Yet this argument has a flip side: If consumers of these products die earlier, they will also collect less in pension payments, including Social Security. Economists have run the numbers for smoking and often find that these savings may more than offset the budgetary costs. In other words, smokers have little net financial impact on the rest of us…

…There is, however, an altogether different argument for these taxes: that when someone consumes such goods, he does impose a negative externality — on the future version of himself. In other words, the person today enjoys the consumption, but the person tomorrow and every day after pays the price of increased risk of illness.

This raises an intriguing question: To what extent should we view the future versions of ourselves as different people from ourselves today?

…But people do not suddenly mature at the age of 18, when society deems us “adults.” There is always an adolescent lurking inside us, feeling the pull of instant gratification and too easily ignoring the long-run effects of our decisions. Taxes on items with short-run benefits and long-run costs tell our current selves to take into account the welfare of our future selves.

IF this is indeed the best argument for “sin” taxes, as I believe it is, we are led to vexing questions of political philosophy: To what extent should we use the power of the state to protect us from ourselves? If we go down that route, where do we stop?

Taxing soda may encourage better nutrition and benefit our future selves. But so could taxing candy, ice cream and fried foods. Subsidizing broccoli, gym memberships and dental floss comes next. Taxing mindless television shows and subsidizing serious literature cannot be far behind.

Even as adults, we sometimes wish for parents to be looking over our shoulders and guiding us to the right decisions. The question is, do you trust the government enough to appoint it your guardian?

N. Gregory Mankiw is a professor of economics at Harvard.

I think from my point of view, that the answer to that philosophical question is this: you apply taxation or subsidies when the public costs or benefits are large and obvious. That’s one basic argument for the provision of public goods like healthcare and defence, and for monopolies like rail and electricity generation. Taxing sugary foods and drinks might not meet that criteria, but taxing sugar itself does.

2 comments:

  1. Taxing sugar do make sense in the U.S. After all that country is experiencing the 'obesity epidemic'.

    But such a policy requires policy makers to be 'smarter' than the market. Basically the tax is to reduce consumptions levels of the (stupid or less knowledgeable) public.

    But this is tricky. Negative health effects of over consumption does not only apply to sugar, but also to lots and lots of food items.

    The implicit solution to this problem is that the 'public' itself must make its own choice... via the political system. But saying this leads to the question - does the political system reflects public aspirations???

    Be careful....


    Mamat

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  2. From the feedback at the Subsidy Rationalisation Lab Open Day, there was a lot of support for removing production subsidies on sugar, and some of the comments from the floor wanted these subsidies to be removed immediately, rather than gredually over three to five years.

    Part of the reason is that we are having our own obesity and diabetes epidemic - consumption of sugar per capita in Malaysia is 50% over the recommended daily allowance, and incidence of obesity and diabetes is high and rising.

    If that figure is correct, than there is a strong argument (in the case of sugar at least) for punitive taxation, not least because the science on the link between sugar and health problems is pretty clear.

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