| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5098160 | Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control | 2016 | 16 Pages | 
Abstract
												I study a revenue-neutral reform of the U.S. income tax and welfare system that involves the adoption of a Negative Income Tax (NIT). The reform is undertaken in a life-cycle economy with individual heterogeneity and uninsurable idiosyncratic labor risk. The optimal NIT consists of a 22% rate and a transfer equivalent to 11% of per-capita GDP. The ex-ante average welfare gain is a 2.1% annual increase of individual consumption. I show that a NIT outperforms a flat tax reform (income tax plus deduction) by a considerable margin. The key consequence of the reform is that high-productivity agents increase their relative importance in the labor supply at the expense of low-productivity agents.
											Related Topics
												
													Physical Sciences and Engineering
													Mathematics
													Control and Optimization
												
											Authors
												Martin Lopez-Daneri, 
											