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1. Total surplus is always equal to the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus.
2. Total surplus in a market does not change when the government imposes a tax on that market because the loss of
consumer surplus and producer surplus is equal to the gain of government revenue.
3. When a tax is imposed on buyers, consumer surplus and producer surplus both decrease.
4. When a tax is imposed on buyers, consumer surplus decreases but producer surplus increases.
5. When a tax is imposed on sellers, producer surplus decreases but consumer surplus increases.
6. When a tax is imposed on sellers, consumer surplus and producer surplus both decrease.
7. Taxes affect market participants by increasing the price paid by the buyer and received by the seller.
8. Taxes affect market participants by increasing the price paid by the buyer and decreasing the price received by the
seller.
9. A tax raises the price received by sellers and lowers the price paid by buyers.
10. Normally, both buyers and sellers of a good become worse off when the good is taxed.
11. When a good is taxed, the tax revenue collected by the government equals the decrease in the welfare of buyers and
sellers caused by the tax.
12. A tax places a wedge between the price buyers pay and the price sellers receive.
13. A tax on a good causes the size of the market to increase.
14. A tax on a good causes the size of the market to shrink.
15. When a tax is imposed, the loss of consumer surplus and producer surplus as a result of the tax exceeds the tax
revenue collected by the government.
16. Economists use the government’s tax revenue to measure the public benefit from a tax.
17. Because taxes distort incentives, they cause markets to allocate resources inefficiently.
18. Taxes cause deadweight losses because they prevent buyers and sellers from realizing some of the gains from trade.
19. If the government imposes a $3 tax in a market, the equilibrium price will rise by $3.
20. If the government imposes a $3 tax in a market, the buyers and sellers will share an equal burden of the tax.
21. Taxes create deadweight losses.
22. When a tax is imposed on a good, consumer surplus decreases and producer surplus remains unchanged.
23. When a tax is imposed on a good, the resulting decrease in consumer surplus is always larger than the resulting
decrease in producer surplus.
24. Taxes drive a wedge into the market by raising the price that sellers receive and lowering the price that buyers pay.
25. Tax revenue equals the size of the tax multiplied by the quantity sold in the market after the tax is levied.
26. As the price elasticities of supply and demand increase, the deadweight loss from a tax increases.
27. The greater the elasticity of demand, the smaller the deadweight loss of a tax.
28. The more inelastic are demand and supply, the greater is the deadweight loss of a tax.
29. The elasticities of the supply and demand curves in the market for cigarettes affect how much a tax distorts that
market.
30. If a tax did not induce buyers or sellers to change their behavior, it would not cause a deadweight loss.
31. The most important tax in the U.S. economy is the tax on corporations’ profits.
32. The Social Security tax, and to a large extent, the federal income tax, are labor taxes.
33. Taxes on labor tend to increase the number of hours that people choose to work.
34. Taxes on labor tend to encourage the elderly to retire early.
35. Taxes on labor tend to encourage second earners to stay at home rather than work in the labor force.
36. Economists disagree on whether labor taxes have a small or large deadweight loss.
37. The demand for bread is less elastic than the demand for donuts; hence, a tax on bread will create a larger deadweight
loss than will the same tax on donuts, other things equal.
38. The larger the deadweight loss from taxation, the larger the cost of government programs.
39. A tax on insulin is likely to cause a very large deadweight loss to society.
40. When demand is relatively elastic, the deadweight loss of a tax is larger than when demand is relatively inelastic.
41. The more elastic the supply, the larger the deadweight loss from a tax, all else equal.
42. The demand for beer is more elastic than the demand for milk, so a tax on beer would have a smaller deadweight loss
than an equivalent tax on milk, all else equal.
43. The Social Security tax is a labor tax.
44. When a good is taxed, the deadweight loss is larger the more elastic are demand and supply.
45. The deadweight loss of a tax rises even more rapidly than the size of the tax.
46. As the size of a tax increases, the government’s tax revenue rises, then falls.
47. Tax revenues increase in direct proportion to increases in the size of the tax.
48. If the size of a tax doubles, the deadweight loss doubles.
49. If the size of a tax triples, the deadweight loss increases by a factor of six.
50. Economist Arthur Laffer made the argument that tax rates in the United States were so high that reducing the rates
would increase tax revenue.
51. The Laffer curve is the curve showing how tax revenue varies as the size of the tax varies.
52. The result of the large tax cuts in the first Reagan Administration demonstrated very convincingly that Arthur Laffer
was correct when he asserted that cuts in tax rates would increase tax revenue.
53. The idea that tax cuts would increase the quantity of labor supplied, thus increasing tax revenue, became known as
supply-side economics.
54. The Laffer curve illustrates how taxes in markets with greater elasticities of demand compare to taxes in markets with
smaller elasticities of supply.
55. The more elastic are supply and demand in a market, the greater are the distortions caused by a tax on that market, and
the more likely it is that a tax cut in that market will raise tax revenue.
56. The optimal tax is difficult to determine because although revenues rise and fall as the size of the tax increases,
deadweight loss continues to increase.
57. Suppose that a university charges students a $100 “tax” to register for business classes. The next year the university
raises the “tax” to $150. The deadweight loss from the “tax” triples.
58. Economists dismiss the idea that lower tax rates can lead to higher tax revenue, because there is a consensus that the
relevant elasticities of demand and supply are very low.
59. When the government imposes taxes on buyers and sellers of a good, society loses some of the benefits of market
efficiency.