Henrik Christoffersen () and Gert Tinggaard Svendsen ()
Additional contact information
Henrik Christoffersen: Institute of Local Government Studies, Postal: Nyropsgade 37, 1602 København C, Denmark
Gert Tinggaard Svendsen: Department of Economics, Aarhus School of Business, Postal: Prismet, Silkeborgvej 2, DK 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
Abstract: Two main results in traditional tax theory states the following. First, general taxes minimize the welfare loss from
changed relative prices. Second, because the total public budget tends to exceed the optimal size, a leader (here
named ‘troop leader’) is needed in the budget process to prevent over-taxation. Nevertheless, differentiated taxes
initiated by individual ministries generate a still larger proportion of total tax revenue, in particular under cover of
taxing externalities such as environmental pollution. We suggest that this situation leads to over-taxation for two
reasons. First, the absence of a strong and fully informed troop leader prevents rational coordination of collective
action. Second, budget maximization leads to overwhelming fiscal pressure because bureaucracies are competing
about resources just like fishermen or hunters (here named ‘bureaucratic tax-seeking’). Taxing citizens or firms is
like harvesting rents from a natural resource and therefore we apply a common-pool resource model. Because
bureaucracies compete about maximizing their share of tax payers‘ money, this leads to over-taxation and an
irrational outcome for both bureaucrats and society. These suggestions are strongly confirmed by the case of the
Danish waste tax. Thus, we recommend that bureaucratic institutions should coordinate their tax-seeking efforts
to maximize budgets in the long run and that the ministries that collect green tax revenues should not be allowed
to control these revenues. Such a budget maximization opportunity would kick off a new self-destructive fiscal
race among competing tax-seeking bureaucracies.
Keywords: Bureaucratic tax-seeking; Troop leader; Common-pool resource model; Green taxation; Waste tax
18 pages, January 1, 2000
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