Throughout American history, the U.S. federal and state governments have imposed excise taxes on commodities such as alcohol and tobacco (and more recently, gasoline and firearms). Rates of such "sin" taxation, and consumption taxation broadly (including sales taxes and value-added taxes), are currently much lower in the United States than they are in Europe, Japan, and other affluent parts of the world. In part, this reflects relative government sizes, but that is not the whole story, since even controlling for total tax collections, levels of national income, government decentralization, and openness to international trade, the United States imposes unusually low excise and consumption taxes. As a result, the United States relies to a muc...
This Article explores consumption tax proposals as a possible alternative to the current income tax ...
In this paper we contribute new empirical results about consumers’ decisions to avoid cigarette exci...
Sin or public health taxes are excise taxes imposed on the consumption of potentially harmful goods ...
Federal and state governments in the United States use income and payroll taxes as their primary too...
In June 2016, Philadelphia became the largest city in the United States to pass a soda tax, which we...
Excise taxes on alcohol and tobacco have long been a dependable and significant revenue source in ma...
The governments of most industrialized nations, especially in the European Community, use consumptio...
How does the Commonwealth tax alcohol? We look at the taxation of beer, wine and distilled spirits a...
Why tax? Are taxes truly what we pay for [a] civilized society? Or, are taxes merely collected to...
This article aims to examine how sin taxation changes long-term consumer behavior regarding commodit...
There are many reasons why a government would like to tax differentially commodities known as "bads....
The author contrasts excise taxes with sales taxes, consumption taxes, licenses, stamp, duties, and ...
The externality costs generated by excessive alcohol consumption warrant the imposition of alcohol s...
This brief provides a detailed comparison of excise tax rates across the United States. FRC Brief 19
We study the optimal taxation and regulation of sin goods – goods that are enjoyable to consume but ...
This Article explores consumption tax proposals as a possible alternative to the current income tax ...
In this paper we contribute new empirical results about consumers’ decisions to avoid cigarette exci...
Sin or public health taxes are excise taxes imposed on the consumption of potentially harmful goods ...
Federal and state governments in the United States use income and payroll taxes as their primary too...
In June 2016, Philadelphia became the largest city in the United States to pass a soda tax, which we...
Excise taxes on alcohol and tobacco have long been a dependable and significant revenue source in ma...
The governments of most industrialized nations, especially in the European Community, use consumptio...
How does the Commonwealth tax alcohol? We look at the taxation of beer, wine and distilled spirits a...
Why tax? Are taxes truly what we pay for [a] civilized society? Or, are taxes merely collected to...
This article aims to examine how sin taxation changes long-term consumer behavior regarding commodit...
There are many reasons why a government would like to tax differentially commodities known as "bads....
The author contrasts excise taxes with sales taxes, consumption taxes, licenses, stamp, duties, and ...
The externality costs generated by excessive alcohol consumption warrant the imposition of alcohol s...
This brief provides a detailed comparison of excise tax rates across the United States. FRC Brief 19
We study the optimal taxation and regulation of sin goods – goods that are enjoyable to consume but ...
This Article explores consumption tax proposals as a possible alternative to the current income tax ...
In this paper we contribute new empirical results about consumers’ decisions to avoid cigarette exci...
Sin or public health taxes are excise taxes imposed on the consumption of potentially harmful goods ...