Working Paper

Optimal Redistribution: Rising Inequality vs. Rising Living Standards

Axelle Ferriere, Philipp Grübener, Dominik Sachs
CESifo, Munich, 2024

CESifo Working Paper No. 11141

Over the last decades, the United States has experienced a large increase in, both, income inequality and living standards. The workhorse models of optimal income taxation call for more redistribution as inequality rises. By contrast, living standards play no role for taxes and transfers in these homothetic environments. This paper incorporates living standards into the optimal income tax problem by means of non-homothetic preferences. In a Mirrlees setup, we show that rising living standards alter both sides of the equity-efficiency trade-off. As an economy becomes richer, non-homotheticities imply a fall in the dispersion of marginal utilities, which weakens distributional concerns but has ambiguous effects on efficiency concerns. In a dynamic incomplete-market setup calibrated to the United States in 1950 and 2010, we quantify this new channel. Rising living standards dampen by at least 25% the desired increase in redistribution due to rising inequality.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Keywords: taxation, growth, non-homothetic preferences, redistribution
JEL Classification: E620, H210, H310, O230