Self-control and related concepts appear regularly in tax discussions, but often they are invoked hazily or blurred together with other aspects of choice over time. Despite the evident relevance of willpower to consumption patterns, wealth accumulation, and, ultimately, well-being, there is no consensus about whether and how heterogeneity along this dimension should factor into tax policy. There is support in the tax literature for such divergent responses as funneling more resources to low-willpower people, penalizing them for their lapses, and limiting their choices. Whether we should follow one of these approaches, or some other approach entirely, requires a careful analysis of willpower’s workings and its connections to well-being. To b...
A significant body of research suggests that self-control and willpower are resources that become de...
We analyse a model of income tax avoidance with heterogenous agents who face monetary as well as psy...
acknowledges financial support from the National Science Foundation (SES—0096431). Much of the liter...
Self-control and related concepts appear regularly in tax discussions, but often they are invoked ha...
We model self-control conflict as an agent's stochastic struggle against a visceral influence that i...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
Most contemporary self-control theories share two core assumptions. They assume that indulgence is t...
We model self-control conflict as an agent’s stochastic struggle against a visceral influence that i...
Common intuition and experimental psychology suggest that the ability to self‐regulate ( willpower )...
We analyse the determination of taxes on harmful goods when consumers have self-control problems. We...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
Economists currently analyze optimal commodity taxation based on the assumption that people’s choice...
In “Willpower with and without effort”, G. Ainslie advances our understanding of selfcontrol ...
This Article explores the ways in which tax systems confer and distribute power. All tax systems imp...
The present study develops the debate over whether self-control is a limited resource, by investigat...
A significant body of research suggests that self-control and willpower are resources that become de...
We analyse a model of income tax avoidance with heterogenous agents who face monetary as well as psy...
acknowledges financial support from the National Science Foundation (SES—0096431). Much of the liter...
Self-control and related concepts appear regularly in tax discussions, but often they are invoked ha...
We model self-control conflict as an agent's stochastic struggle against a visceral influence that i...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
Most contemporary self-control theories share two core assumptions. They assume that indulgence is t...
We model self-control conflict as an agent’s stochastic struggle against a visceral influence that i...
Common intuition and experimental psychology suggest that the ability to self‐regulate ( willpower )...
We analyse the determination of taxes on harmful goods when consumers have self-control problems. We...
This paper reviews key contributions to the psychology and economics literature on willpower. Unders...
Economists currently analyze optimal commodity taxation based on the assumption that people’s choice...
In “Willpower with and without effort”, G. Ainslie advances our understanding of selfcontrol ...
This Article explores the ways in which tax systems confer and distribute power. All tax systems imp...
The present study develops the debate over whether self-control is a limited resource, by investigat...
A significant body of research suggests that self-control and willpower are resources that become de...
We analyse a model of income tax avoidance with heterogenous agents who face monetary as well as psy...
acknowledges financial support from the National Science Foundation (SES—0096431). Much of the liter...