Tax incentives can be more or less salient, i.e. noticeable or cognitively easy to process. Our hypothesis is that taxes on consumers are more salient to consumers than equivalent taxes on sellers because consumers underestimate the extent of tax shifting in the market. We show that tax salience biases consumers’ voting on tax regimes, and that experience is an effective de-biasing mechanism in the experimental laboratory. Pre-vote deliberation makes initially held opinions more extreme rather than correct and does not eliminate the bias in the typical committee. Yet, if voters can discuss their experience with the tax regimes they are less likely to be biased.tax salience; learning; deliberation; voting
A central assumption in public economics is that individuals optimize fully to tax policies, meanin...
We conduct a series of four laboratory experiments and interviews with senior tax professionals to s...
This article reports the findings of several experiments about perceptions of various aspects of tax...
We let consumers vote on tax regimes in experimental markets. We test if taxes on sellers are more p...
Although a basic theoretical principle in public economics assumes that individuals optimize fully w...
While a basic theoretical principle in public economics assumes that individuals’ behaviour is fully...
Using two strategies, we show that consumers underreact to taxes that are not salient. First, using ...
This paper shows that accounting for variation in mistakes can be crucial for welfare analysis. Focu...
This Article analyzes the literatures on how individuals understand taxation (i.e., tax salience). W...
This Article analyzes the behavioral economics literatures on how individuals understand taxation (i...
Taxation impacts social welfare in an intricate manner. Currently employed tax instruments throughou...
In making decisions, individuals rely on heuristics or cognitive biases. One of these is salience, w...
A basic principle in public finance is tax incidence equivalence (well known as Liability Side Equiv...
This paper investigates how decision biases affect individuals’ tax decisions. We conduct four labor...
A recent surge of literature on tax salience has included studies that use tax type as a proxy for s...
A central assumption in public economics is that individuals optimize fully to tax policies, meanin...
We conduct a series of four laboratory experiments and interviews with senior tax professionals to s...
This article reports the findings of several experiments about perceptions of various aspects of tax...
We let consumers vote on tax regimes in experimental markets. We test if taxes on sellers are more p...
Although a basic theoretical principle in public economics assumes that individuals optimize fully w...
While a basic theoretical principle in public economics assumes that individuals’ behaviour is fully...
Using two strategies, we show that consumers underreact to taxes that are not salient. First, using ...
This paper shows that accounting for variation in mistakes can be crucial for welfare analysis. Focu...
This Article analyzes the literatures on how individuals understand taxation (i.e., tax salience). W...
This Article analyzes the behavioral economics literatures on how individuals understand taxation (i...
Taxation impacts social welfare in an intricate manner. Currently employed tax instruments throughou...
In making decisions, individuals rely on heuristics or cognitive biases. One of these is salience, w...
A basic principle in public finance is tax incidence equivalence (well known as Liability Side Equiv...
This paper investigates how decision biases affect individuals’ tax decisions. We conduct four labor...
A recent surge of literature on tax salience has included studies that use tax type as a proxy for s...
A central assumption in public economics is that individuals optimize fully to tax policies, meanin...
We conduct a series of four laboratory experiments and interviews with senior tax professionals to s...
This article reports the findings of several experiments about perceptions of various aspects of tax...