Table of contents : Cover ......Page 1 Title......Page 4 Copyright......Page 5 Contents......Page 8 Introduction......Page 12 Preface ......Page 28 Introductory Note to the 1980 Edition ......Page 30 PART ONE THE ANALYSIS OF POLICY......Page 32 1–1 Introduction ......Page 34 1–2 Role of the Government ......Page 35 1–3 Guide to the Lectures ......Page 39 Note: The Public Sector—Statistical Background ......Page 43 2–1 Introduction ......Page 50 2–2 Income Taxation and Labour Supply ......Page 57 2–3 Broader Models of Labour Supply ......Page 67 2–4 Empirical Evidence on Labour Supply ......Page 71 2–5 Concluding Comments ......Page 78 Note on the Expenditure Function ......Page 79 Reading ......Page 81 3–1 Intertemporal Decisions and Taxation ......Page 82 3–2 The Basic Intertemporal Model ......Page 87 3–3 Developments of the Model and Alternative Views ......Page 97 3–4 Empirical Evidence—Taxation and the Interest Elasticity of Savings ......Page 105 3–5 Concluding Comments ......Page 108 Reading ......Page 109 4–1 Risk-Taking and Portfolio Allocation ......Page 110 4–2 Effects of Taxation ......Page 116 4–3 Special Provisions of the Tax System ......Page 122 4–4 Generalization of Results ......Page 127 4–5 Concluding Comments ......Page 133 Note on Risk Aversion ......Page 134 Reading ......Page 135 5–1 Taxes and the Firm ......Page 136 5–2 Corporation Tax and the Cost of Capital ......Page 139 5–3 Taxation and Investment ......Page 148 5–4 A Wider View of Investment ......Page 154 5–5 Empirical Investigation of Taxation and Investment ......Page 158 5–6 Concluding Comments ......Page 161 Reading ......Page 162 6–1 Introduction: Tax Incidence ......Page 163 6–2 Static Two-Sector Model ......Page 167 6–3 Incidence of Corporation Tax ......Page 173 6–4 General Tax Incidence ......Page 178 6–5 Incidence in a Two-Class Economy ......Page 186 6–6 Numerical Applications of the Model ......Page 190 6–7 Concluding Comments ......Page 194 Note on the Cost Function......Page 195 Reading ......Page 196 7–1 Introduction ......Page 197 7–2 Market Imperfections ......Page 198 7–3 Monopolistic Competition ......Page 203 7–4 Structure of Production ......Page 211 7–5 Non-Market-Clearing ......Page 215 Reading......Page 219 8–1 Introduction ......Page 220 8–2 An Aggregate Model of Equilibrium Growth ......Page 222 8–3 Growth and Taxation ......Page 228 8–4 Taxation in a Life-Cycle Model ......Page 233 8–5 Burden of the National Debt ......Page 239 8–6 Concluding Comments ......Page 245 Reading ......Page 246 9–1 Taxation, Spending, and Redistribution ......Page 247 9–2 Modelling the Distribution of Income ......Page 253 9–3 Distributional Incidence ......Page 262 9–4 Empirical Studies of the Redistributive Impact of the Government Budget ......Page 266 9–5 Concluding Comments ......Page 275 Reading ......Page 276 10–1 Introduction ......Page 277 10–2 Voting and Decisions ......Page 281 10–3 Administration and Bureaucracies ......Page 290 10–4 Power, Interest Groups, and Marxist Theories ......Page 294 10–5 Empirical Studies of Public Expenditure ......Page 299 Reading ......Page 305 PART TWO THE DESIGN OF POLICY ......Page 306 11–1 Introduction ......Page 308 11–2 Normative Theories of the State ......Page 310 11–3 Pareto Efficiency and Welfare Economics ......Page 316 11–4 Standard Public Finance Objectives ......Page 322 11–5 Range of Government Instruments ......Page 327 Note on the Measurement of Income Inequality ......Page 333 Reading ......Page 334 12–1 Introduction ......Page 335 12–2 The Ramsey Tax Problem ......Page 339 12–3 Application of the Ramsey Results ......Page 344 12–4 Partial Welfare Improvements and Tax Reform ......Page 349 12–5 Optimal Taxation in a Many-Person Economy ......Page 353 Reading......Page 358 13–1 Introduction ......Page 359 13–2 A Simple Model ......Page 362 13–3 Linear Income Tax ......Page 369 13–4 General Income Tax ......Page 374 13–5 Concluding Comments ......Page 383 Reading ......Page 384 14–1 Introduction ......Page 385 14–2 Indirect Taxes and Linear Direct Taxation ......Page 388 14–3 Nonlinear Tax Schedules and Tax Exemptions ......Page 395 14–4 Taxation of Savings ......Page 401 14–5 Externalities in Consumption and Corrective Taxes ......Page 409 14–6 Concluding Comments ......Page 412 Reading ......Page 413 15–1 Introduction ......Page 414 15–2 Departures from Marginal Cost Pricing ......Page 417 15–3 Choice of Technique and Production Efficiency ......Page 425 15–4 Cost–Benefit Analysis and Social Rate of Discount ......Page 429 15–5 Concluding Comments ......Page 433 Reading ......Page 434 16–1 Introduction ......Page 435 16–2 Optimum Provision of Pure Public Goods—Efficiency ......Page 439 16–3 Optimum Provision of Pure Public Goods—Distribution ......Page 446 16–4 Publicly Provided Private Goods ......Page 448 16–5 Equilibrium Levels of Public Expenditure ......Page 455 16–6 Revelation of Preferences ......Page 461 Reading ......Page 465 17–1 Introduction ......Page 466 17–2 Optimum Provision of Local Public Goods ......Page 468 17–3 Market Equilibria and Optimality: Identical Individuals ......Page 477 17–4 Market Equilibria and Optimality: Heterogeneous Individuals ......Page 483 17–5 Fiscal Federalism ......Page 492 Reading ......Page 496 18–1 On the Sources of Disagreement in Policy Analysis ......Page 497 18–2 Thinking about Policy: Taxation ......Page 501 18–3 Thinking about Policy: Expenditures ......Page 507 18–4 Policy Reform and Political Economy ......Page 510 Bibliography......Page 512 Author Index ......Page 540 Subject Index ......Page 544