Thomas Piketty, Paris School of Economics
Academic year 2012-2013
Course Notes:
Optimal corrective taxation of externalities:
a simple numerical example
Continuum of agents i in [0;1]
Two goods: non-energy goods c and energy goods e
Identical utility function: U = U(c,e,E) = (1-α)log(c) + αlog(e) – λlog(E)
With: c = individual c consumption
e = individual e consumption
E = aggregate e consumption = negative externality (e.g. global warming)
Linear production function (full substitutability): everybody supplies one unit of labor, and labor can be used to produce linearly c or e
Aggregate budget constraint: C + E < Y = 1
Laissez-faire equilibrium:
Max U(c,e,E) under c+e<y=1
→ c = (1-α)y & e = αy
Say, α = 20% & 1-α=80% : in the absence of corrective taxation, we spend 20% of our ressources on energy (20% of the workforce works in the energy sector, etc.)
Social optimum:
Max U(C,E,E) under C+E<Y=1
→ C = (1-α)Y/(1-λ) & E = (α-λ)Y/(1-λ)
Say, α = 20% & 1-α=80% & λ=10%: given the global warming externality , we should only be spending 11% of our ressources on energy
How to implement the social optimum? A corrective tax tE on energy consumption financing a lump sum transfer equals to tE:
Max U(c,e,E) under c+pe<y
With : p =1+t & y =1+tE
→ c = (1-α)y & e = αy/p
→ Optimal corrective tax : α/p = (α-λ)/(1-λ)
I.e. p = 1+t = α(1-λ)/(α-λ) = 180%
Say, α = 20% & 1-α=80% & λ=10%: we need a tax rate t=80% to correct the global warming externality; in effect, consumers pay their energy 80% higher than production costs; they keep spending 20% of their budget on energy, but 80%/180% = 45% of these spendings are paid to the government in energy taxes; i.e. 9% of national income Y goes into energy taxes, and everybody receives a green dividend equals to 9% of national income; in effect, the size of the energy sector is divided by two