Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label Differences in Values

Differences in Values

Suppose that Peter and Paula both take the same amount of water from the town well. To pay for maintaining the well, the town taxes its residents. Peter has income of $50,000 and is taxed $5,000 or 10 percent of his income. Paula has income of $10,000 and is taxed $2,000, or 20 percent of her income. Is this policy fair? If not, who pays too much and who pays too little? Does it matter whether Paula,s low income is due to a medical disability or to her decision to pursue a career in acting? Does it matter whether Peter’s high income is due to a large inheritance or to his willingness to work long hours at a dreary job? These are difficult questions on which people are likely to disagree. If the town hired two experts to study how the town should tax its residents to pay for the well, we would not be surprised   if they offered conflicting advice.  This simple example shows why economists sometimes disagree about public policy. As we learned earlier in ou...