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Efficiency Criteria, Income Taxation, and Heterogeneous Elasticities

John Sturm Becko1; Andre Sztutman2

1 Princeton (email: ) · 2 Carnegie Mellon (email: )

American Economic Review 2026

A common interpretation of Pareto-efficient policies is that, for some cardinal utility representations of preferences, they maximize utilitarian welfare. We show in the context of income taxation that such cardinalizations are often extreme, requiring unbounded curvature of utility with respect to consumption. Taxes can be justified as utilitarian without these extreme cardinalizations if and only if revenues are decreasing and concave in a class of narrowly targeted tax cuts. We reformulate this condition as a sufficient-statistics test. The test fails whenever elasticities of taxable income are too heterogeneous within some income level, as we argue is empirically likely. (JEL D81, H21, H23, H24, J22, J31)

DOI
10.1257/aer.20240919
Volume
116 (5)
Pages
1876-1913
Language
en
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