A. Wagstaff et al., Redistributive effect, progressivity and differential tax treatment: Personal income taxes in twelve OECD countries, J PUBLIC EC, 72(1), 1999, pp. 73-98
This paper decomposes the redistributive effect of the personal income taxe
s (PITs) of twelve OECD countries into four components: (i) an average rate
effect, (ii) a departure-from-propartionality or progressivity effect, (ii
i) a horizontal equity effect and (iv) a reranking effect. The product of (
i) and (ii) indicates the vertical redistribution associated with the PIT a
nd the sum of(iii) and (iv) indicates the impact on the distribution of inc
ome of differential tax treatment. The average tax rate is found to be low
in France and high in the Nordic countries, and the PIT is found to be most
progressive in France, Ireland and Spain, and least progressive in Denmark
and Sweden. Taking (i) and (ii) together, Denmark and the US achieve broad
ly similar levels of vertical redistributive effect. Differential treatment
is found to have a much smaller effect on income redistribution (as a prop
ortion of redistributive effect) than the vertical redistribution caused by
progressivity, though there are differences between countries. These diffe
rences appear to be due principally to a different emphasis on deductions,
such as tax deductibility of mortgage interest payments and insurance premi
ums, and on local income tax. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science S.A. All rights res
erved.