Abstract
This paper explores the optimal tax structure in the presence of status effect. When the consumption of certain goods affects one’s social status, this creates an externality, which results in two opposite effects in a society. Seeking higher status through “positional goods” gives individuals much incentive to supply labor but still allocates income for less “nonpositional goods” as well. In this case, differentiated taxes on positional goods work as corrective instruments to internalize the social cost stemming from status seeking. Furthermore, the differentiated taxes generate revenue that can be used to alleviate preexisting income tax distortion. We develop a game-theoretic model in which each individual with different labor productivity unknown to the others engages in a status-seeking game, where government has a revenue requirement. Then we show that under a condition in which utility is separable between positional goods and leisure, a revenue-neutral shift in the tax mix away from nonlinear income taxes toward positional-good taxes enhances welfare. Hence, the differentiated taxes on positional goods are necessary together with the nonlinear income taxes for an optimal tax structure. Moreover, the differentiated taxes on positional goods could reduce the progressivity of the nonlinear income taxes, which is the case that can easily apply to practical use.
1 Introduction
Tax systems are very diverse in practice. While the United States relies mainly on income taxation, many countries in the European Union weight differentiated commodity taxation. Furthermore, developing countries usually impose differentiated taxes on luxury goods to prevent wasteful consumption. For example, in recent years, Mexico levied a luxury tax on several items; Australia levied tax on luxury cars, with a maximum tax rate of 33%; Hungary levied a luxury tax for real estate, yachts and cars whose value exceeded $150,000. Similarly, Russians with cars worth more than $90,000 will now have to pay as much as $4,000 a year in taxes on these vehicles.[1] Although luxury taxes do not constitute a significant portion of tax revenues (ratio of luxury tax to overall tax revenue is 1% and 0.1% for Mexico and Australia, respectively), governments see them as a potential area for revenue raising. Sometimes luxury goods are consumed to achieve a better status in society. Veblen (1899) argued that people advertise their positions in a wealth hierarchy by consuming expensive products such as Rolex watches. Such individual behaviors set off a status-seeking game that wastefully allocates income for more “positional goods.” Thus, a positional externality occurs when new purchases alter the relevant context within which an existing positional good is evaluated. For example, as more individuals start wearing Rolex watches in a society, utility of those who already had Rolex watches will go down. Studies by Frank (1985), Seidman (1988) and Ireland (1994) show that if agents’ preferences are sensitive to a ranking based on the consumption of a particular good, the consumption of this positional good causes welfare loss. In order to seek higher status through conspicuous consumption, one has a lot of incentive to supply labor at a higher level, which can alleviate preexisting income-tax distortion. Accordingly, differentiated taxes on positional goods reduce this positive effect of conspicuous consumption on labor supply while simultaneously reducing positional externality by reallocating income for more “non-positional goods.” Therefore, the differentiated taxes in the existence of conspicuous consumption generate two opposite effects in a tax system.
Without arriving at definite conclusions and with still being open to debate even today, much has been written about the choice between differentiated commodity and income taxes for an optimal tax structure. The prominent work of Atkinson and Stiglitz (1976) and subsequent studies by Christiansen (1984) and Saez (2002) conclude that an optimal tax structure consists of only nonlinear income taxes without any commodity taxes under the condition in which utility is separable between commodities and leisure.[2] Moreover, Kaplow (2006) shows that commodity taxation is still undesirable even if the preexisting income taxes are not as optimal as in reality. In other words, differentiated commodity taxes cannot supplement either optimal or non-optimal nonlinear income taxes. However, all the previous studies ignore status effect in a form of externality that the consumption of positional goods carries. The differentiated taxes on positional goods in this case can function as a corrective tool for cutting down wasteful consumption from the status-seeking race. In addition, these taxes also generate revenue that can be used to lessen preexisting income tax distortion. Such a budget-neutral tax reform shares some similarities with the budget-neutral environmental tax reforms studied in the environmental economics literature that analyzes in a second-best framework the possibility of obtaining a double dividend by recycling the environmental tax revenues in order to reduce other distortionary taxes. The double dividend occurs if and only if the revenue recycling effect outweighs the tax interaction effect as demonstrated in the seminal papers of Bovenberg and de Mooij (1994), Bovenberg and Goulder (1996) (see also Goulder (1995) or Bovenberg (1999)). Positional externality as studied in this paper is similar to an environmental externality in the sense that a tax on the good, which is the source of externality, increases welfare. However, positional externality differs from standard environmental externality because the existence of positional good provides extra incentive to supply more labor.[3]
The purpose of this paper is to explore the optimal tax structure in the presence of status effect. We develop a game-theoretic model in which each individual with a different labor productivity unknown to the others engages in a status-seeking game, where government has a revenue requirement. Then, we examine the welfare effect of a revenue-neutral shift in the tax mix away from nonlinear income taxes toward positional-good taxes. Finally, we focus on the distributional consequences of the tax reform.
The contribution of this work is to provide economic rationale for the practical use of differentiated taxes on positional goods, which could be corrective and even revenue-raising instruments in a tax system. The welfare implications of tax policies are of high interest for policy makers. When individuals consume positional goods to achieve higher status in a society, income and commodity taxation might have different welfare effects due to the externality that the positional good creates. To correct the externality from conspicuous consumption, Hopkins and Kornienko (2004) suggest per-unit taxes positively associated with income levels, since individuals with relatively higher incomes spend money more on positional goods and, thus, generate more externality. A corrective instrument that depends on income is too unrealistic to apply to the actual tax environment. In contrast, this paper employs differentiated commodity taxes which do not depend on the income levels so that a government can use it in the real world. It still has the function of correcting the externality, however. Ireland (1994) uses a signaling model and shows that a linear tax on positional good is Pareto improving. His analysis is based on some examples for specific utility functions. In both Hopkins and Kornienko (2004) and Ireland (1994) labor income is exogenous which means there is no preexisting labor supply distortion. When labor supply is endogenous, the existence of positional goods alleviates preexisting labor tax distortions because individuals will work more in equilibrium to obtain higher status. Hence, a tax on positional good will exacerbate preexisting labor supply distortion, while reducing positional externality by causing equilibrium positional good consumption to decrease. These two offsetting effects on welfare exist in our model as we allow for endogeneity of labor supply. Hence, in the existence of preexisting tax distortions the desirability of a tax on positional goods is at stake. Ireland (2001) finds only optimal income taxes on the assumption that a tax authority cannot directly observe how individuals consume positional goods, and thus, it cannot levy any taxes on conspicuous consumption. Thus, the optimal income tax by itself acts as an instrument for both corrective and revenue-raising policy. However, a government can know which types of commodities are visible and carry status effect in the real world.[4] We present a government problem in which the tax authority chooses an alternative tax system when given a set of possible tax instruments (i.e. not only income taxes but also commodity taxes). Finally, the results of Saez (2002) cannot give any specific guidelines for practical use of differentiated taxes on certain types of goods because a government does not know enough about individual tastes of particular goods. However, we may know more about wealthy individuals’ tastes of certain kinds of commodities. This analysis is based on conspicuous consumption in which individuals engage to flaunt their wealth. Since the rich spend relatively more on positional goods to enhance their social positions, this paper can provide useful insights to set differentiated commodity taxes on certain types of goods. Optimal taxation literature has ignored the positional externality for the most part. Moreover, the studies that take into account the status effect assume that income is exogenous (i.e. constant labor supply). However, allowing labor supply to change in the model may have important implications for the desirability of a tax on a positional good as it creates two opposing effects on welfare. To our knowledge, this is the first study that analyzes differentiated taxation of positional good under the assumption of non-linear income tax and endogenous labor supply.
On the same separable-utility assumption as used in Atkinson and Stiglitz (1976), Christiansen (1984) and Saez (2002), we show that the revenue-neutral shift in the tax mix away from nonlinear income taxes toward positional-good taxes enhances welfare. Hence, an optimal tax structure should have differentiated taxes on positional goods together with nonlinear income taxes. On the other hand, Atkinson and Stiglitz (1976), Christiansen (1984) and Saez (2002) insist that the differentiated commodity taxes cannot supplement the nonlinear income taxes and, thus, are necessary for the optimal tax structure. Furthermore, we have found that differentiated taxes on positional goods are required to some extent, even if demands for positional goods are positively related to labor supply. In this case, Christiansen (1984) suggests negative commodity taxes or subsidies. Moreover, income tax structure is found to be less progressive after a revenue-neutral tax reform.
This paper is organized as follows. In the next section, we present a status-seeking game that can be used to examine an optimal tax system in the presence of status effect. Section 3 solves a two-stage optimization problem, explains individual behaviors in a symmetric Nash equilibrium and solves for the optimal income tax without commodity tax. In Section 4, we explore the total welfare effect of the marginal revision in positional-good taxes. Distributional consequences of tax reform are analyzed in Section 5. We offer concluding remarks in the final section.
2 Model Environment
Consider an economy that has a unit measure of individuals who are identical in all respects, except work ability. A level of ability
An individual who devotes his or her work hours l to the labor market at a given wage rate
where
Using the terminology of Frank (1985), the above consumption goods are classified into two types, positional goods and nonpositional goods. The positional good x is so visible that it carries social status to certain individuals. The consumption of a positional good is referred to as conspicuous consumption. In contrast, the consumption of nonpositional good y does not affect one’s status because others cannot directly observe it. Adopting the formulations of Frank (1985), Robson (1992) and Hopkins and Kornienko (2004), we assume that an individual’s social status is determined not only by his or her consumption level of the positional good but also others’ as follows:
where
We assume that all individuals have the following identical utility function:
where the conventional utility index
In this society the government has a revenue requirement. To maintain constituent welfare at a particular level, the government must finance a constant expenditure E by income taxation or commodity taxation. Then the government budget constraint becomes
where we normalize the population size to unity.[5] Since the purpose of the present analysis is to investigate the welfare effect of a revenue-neutral shift in the tax mix away from income tax and toward tax on positional goods, we exploit the analytical method as presented in Christiansen (1984). When the government sets the optimal income taxes
We define a social welfare function
in which the function
3 Status-Seeking Game and Income Taxation
Before proceeding, it could be helpful to explain the timing of decisions by both individuals and government. As in Christiansen (1984) and Saez (2002), we decompose the individual maximization problem into two stages.[6] At the first stage, all individuals engage in the status-seeking game, and they noncooperatively decide their demands for positional and nonpositional goods – conditional on their hours of work. Then the individuals move on to the second stage and choose their hours of work – conditional on the income tax function that the government imposes. Embodying individual demands for two goods and labor supplies in its constraints, the government optimally chooses a tax function at the end of this stage.
3.1 Noncooperative Demand for Goods
This section finds the conditional demand for positional and nonpositional goods when hours of work l are considered as fixed. Regarding the after-tax prices
In eq. [6], the individual choice of the positional good interrelates with those of the others by the distribution of positional goods in this society. Henceforth, the distribution function
Since they are identical in all respects but differ only in wage rate, all individuals decide a symmetric Nash equilibrium demand function for positional goods, such that
where the superscript “
Substituting eq. [7] into the individual maximization problem [6], we have the following Lagrange expression:
Setting the partial derivatives of the Lagrange [8] equal to zero yields the first-order conditions:
Note that
Hence, each individual rank in the distribution of positional goods becomes equal to the original rank in the wage-rate distribution in this society. That is, once all individuals noncooperatively determine their demands for positional goods, they learn that their status is at the same position as in the exogenously given wage-rate hierarchy. Plugging eq. [11] into eqs [9] and [10] can rewrite the first order conditions at the noncooperative equilibrium as
Using eqs [12] and [13], we arrive at the tangency condition
The first term in eq. [15] is the marginal rate of substitution between x and y for the standard maximization problem of the consumer. But the condition includes another term that implies an additional marginal return to the consumption of x, since the positional good carries social status. Each individual has relatively less expenditure for nonpositional goods and relatively more for positional goods due to this additional positive return. Although each individual now consumes more positional good, their status (in terms of consumption of positional good relative to other individuals) will not change. Hence, such noncooperative equilibrium demands for goods are inefficient in terms of conventional utility because resources are being diverted to status seeking. The reduction in efficiency in a noncooperative case is referred to as positional externality in literature. For example, let us assume that a house is a positional good. Living in a bigger house gives additional utility to individuals because of the higher status they earn in society. As the number of big houses increase in the society, utility of individuals who already owned a big house will decrease because their status level will go down. Eventually, everybody lives in a big house but their utility will almost be the same as if they all lived in a smaller house. So, the resources that are spent to build bigger houses actually represent a loss for the economy.
From the collective point of view, the indirect return to conspicuous consumption is undesirable in eq. [15]. Following the cooperative case that Frank (1985) formulates in this context, we pose the maximization problem of each cooperating individual as
where the tilde,
Equation [17] eliminates the spurious return that eq. [15] takes in the noncooperative case. The marginal rate of substitution between x and y is equal to the relative price
Now, replacing for y using eq. [14], the tangency condition [15] in the noncooperative case gives a first-order ordinary differential equation:
Using the cooperative demand for positional good
The poorest individuals with rank
Given the values of
Consequently, we write the corresponding indirect utility function, conditional on hours of work l, as
where the conventional indirect utility function is written as
in which a subscript on a function stands for a partial derivative with respect to it.
3.2 Labor Supplies
In this section, second-stage optimization decides the hours of work, l, that have been treated as fixed until now. Also, gross and disposable incomes,
This optimization reads the first-order condition as
and the second-order condition as
To investigate the incentives to labor supplies in this status-seeking game, we have two tangency conditions for the noncooperative and cooperative cases as follows:[8]
In the noncooperative case [31], the marginal rate of substitution between the positional good x and leisure L (
From the first-order condition [30], we obtain work hours and disposable income in the following forms:[9]
Plugging eqs [33] and [34] into eq. [23] rewrites the indirect utility function as
where
3.3 Optimal Income Taxes
This section focuses only on the condition that characterizes the optimal income tax without any commodity taxes, and the parametric optimization is enough to accomplish that. Thus, the government chooses shift parameter s in the income tax function to optimize social welfare in eq. [5], subject to the government budget constraint in eq. [4], as follows:
This government optimization yields the first-order condition:
where the Lagrange multiplier
4 The Welfare Effect of Conspicuous Consumption Taxes
To explore the total welfare effect of a revenue-neutral change in the tax mix away from income tax and toward a tax on conspicuous consumption, the economy is assumed to be in such a state that the government sets an income tax optimally and does not tax consumable goods. That is, this analysis starts at an initial equilibrium with an existing optimal income tax (
The left-hand side of eq. [38] is the dollar value of the change in social welfare (
Replacing eq. [39] into eq. [38] and subtracting eq. [37] from this gives
The left-hand side of eq. [40] is the total welfare change in terms of dollar value when the government imposes a small tax change
The next step is to evaluate the change in tax burden on the right-hand side of eq. [40]. From eq. [35], the social welfare function is given as
Differentiating the social welfare function [41] partially with respect to
which is applied with two equalities that
Following the analytical method that Christiansen (1984) uses, we define the marginal shift as
Since the per-hour income tax
The final step is to assess the sign of the term (
Subtracting eq. [46] from eq. [45], we have the difference between the changes in work hours, with respect to the tax on positional goods and the shift parameter in the income tax function, as follows:
The defined marginal shift
Plugging the above equalities eq. [48] into eq. [47] and dividing this result by
Differentiating the demand for positional good x in eq. [48] partially with respect to the disposable income z and the hours of work l, we then have
Using eq. [50] and the fact that
Since the wage rate
Replacing eq. [52] into eq. [51] and using the relationship that
Finally, using eq. [53], we rewrite the total welfare change [44] as
where
5 Progressivity of the Tax System
We have analyzed the welfare effect of the revenue-neutral change in the tax system toward tax on conspicuous consumption in previous section. Together with this assessment of welfare effect, one would also be interested in knowing how the change modifies the shape of the optimal income tax. Especially, policymakers would like to know how the tax burden changes for people with different income levels when tax authority introduces tax on conspicuous consumption. That is, they would be concerned with the change in the progressivity of the income tax. In this section, we assess the change in the progressivity of the tax system when the revenue-neutral shift is away from income tax toward tax on conspicuous consumption.
In order to do this analysis, we start with the income tax function,
In eq. [55], if
Assume for the moment that the integrand is equal to zero in eq. [56], i.e.:
Then the total change in the income tax at the initial optimum becomes
The fact that each individual’s income tax burden is reduced exactly by the exact amount of conspicuous consumption tax he or she pays, has important implications in terms of how the tax burden changes for people with different income levels. We know from previous sections that

Income tax progressivity after reform.
We can also assess how the progressivity of commodity tax (i.e. conspicuous consumption tax) changes. We should keep in mind that the tax rate on conspicuous consumption before the reform is zero. A marginal increase in conspicuous consumption tax from zero to positive will make the tax less regressive. In Figure 2 we show how the reform shifts the conspicuous consumption tax. Before the reform it is simply a horizontal line with zero tax rate. After the reform it becomes an increasing function. That is why, we can say that a marginal increase in

Consumption tax progressivity after reform.
In a society income inequality can change over time. Also, the income inequality can be different across societies as well. Hence, it would be interesting to compare tax progressivity changes between two societies different in income distribution. Hopkins and Kornienko (2004) predict that the more equally income is distributed, the more individuals with middle incomes consume conspicuous consumption goods. If people get closer together, then they have greater incentive to differentiate themselves, since the marginal return to conspicuous consumption becomes higher. Suppose both of two societies have an equal average income, but one society’s income distribution
6 Conclusion
In this study we have developed a game-theoretic model wherein individuals with different labor productivity engage a status-seeking game. In this context, we examined the welfare effect of a revenue-neutral shift in the tax mix away from nonlinear income taxes toward positional-good taxes. With a conventional utility function separable between positional goods and hours of work, we inferred that the optimal tax system needs a supplementary tax on positional goods together with an income tax. The result is based on the assumption that the preexisting income tax is at an optimal level. Kaplow (2006) notes that the preexisting income tax may not be optimal in reality. Then, he shows that, even in this case, commodity taxation is undesirable. However, the commodity taxation would still be desirable even with the nonoptimal income tax in the presence of consumption externality. This analysis identifies that the optimal income tax cannot correct the distortion from status-seeking behaviors by itself. Hence, a suboptimal income tax could leave the distortion at a higher level than at an optimal one. In turn, the result of this paper would be consistent even when the preexisting income tax is not optimal. We also showed that income tax will become less progressive after a revenue-neutral shift from income tax toward commodity tax. As rich people consume more positional goods, a revenue-neutral reform (imposing a tax on conspicuous consumption and at the same time decreasing income tax) implies higher subsidies in terms of a reduction in tax. This in turn means bigger reduction in marginal tax for the rich compared to the poor.
Luxury tax has been used at different times by different countries. Especially, when the luxury good is being used by individuals to advertise their position, inefficient amount of resources will be spent on this kind of luxury good. This inefficiency caused by positional goods should be taken into account in welfare analysis of income and commodity taxation. The model developed here can help policymakers make a better decision in terms of optimal tax mix and its distributional consequences. Our analysis is based on the assumption that a government can differentiate positional and nonpositional goods. However, it may be practically impossible for a government to differentiate between positional and nonpositional goods. Furthermore, some goods may generate positional externalities and environmental externalities at the same time (i.e. big cars). Extending this model in these two directions can be the subject of future research.
Appendix
A.1 Proof
The positive welfare effect of the introduction of conspicuous consumption tax for any
Since
Thus, there exists a function
Then,
Plugging eq. [60] into eq. [58], we can rewrite the total change in each individual’s utility as
By using eq. [57], the above equation becomes
which, again, leads to
by subtracting eq. [60] from the parenthesis part of eq. [63]. Differentiate the indirect utility function in eq. [35] partially with respect to
By multiplying eq. [65] by
Since
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Advances
- Turf and Illegal Drug Market Competition between Gangs
- Do Environmental Regulations Increase Bilateral Trade Flows?
- A Macroeconomic Model of Imperfect Competition with Patent Licensing
- Contributions
- Heterogeneous Effects of Informational Nudges on Pro-social Behavior
- Limiting Profit Shifting in a Model with Heterogeneous Firm Productivity
- Public Education, Accountability, and Yardstick Competition in a Federal System
- Social Status, Conspicuous Consumption Levies, and Distortionary Taxation
- Optimal Regulation of Invasive Species Long-Range Spread: A General Equilibrium Approach
- Cooperation or Competition? A Field Experiment on Non-monetary Learning Incentives
- Geographic Mobility and the Costs of Job Loss
- Supply Chain Control: A Theory of Vertical Integration
- Lexicographic Voting: Holding Parties Accountable in the Presence of Downsian Competition
- Topics
- The Transmission of Education across Generations: Evidence from Australia
- Tying to Foreclose in Two-Sided Markets
- Smoking within the Household: Spousal Peer Effects and Children’s Health Implications
- The Dynamics of Offshoring and Institutions
- Long-Run Effects of Catholic Schooling on Wages
- The Interdependence of Immigration Restrictions and Expropriation Risk
- The Effects of Extensive and Intensive Margins of FDI on Domestic Employment: Microeconomic Evidence from Italy
- Are You There God? It’s Me, a College Student: Religious Beliefs and Higher Education
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Advances
- Turf and Illegal Drug Market Competition between Gangs
- Do Environmental Regulations Increase Bilateral Trade Flows?
- A Macroeconomic Model of Imperfect Competition with Patent Licensing
- Contributions
- Heterogeneous Effects of Informational Nudges on Pro-social Behavior
- Limiting Profit Shifting in a Model with Heterogeneous Firm Productivity
- Public Education, Accountability, and Yardstick Competition in a Federal System
- Social Status, Conspicuous Consumption Levies, and Distortionary Taxation
- Optimal Regulation of Invasive Species Long-Range Spread: A General Equilibrium Approach
- Cooperation or Competition? A Field Experiment on Non-monetary Learning Incentives
- Geographic Mobility and the Costs of Job Loss
- Supply Chain Control: A Theory of Vertical Integration
- Lexicographic Voting: Holding Parties Accountable in the Presence of Downsian Competition
- Topics
- The Transmission of Education across Generations: Evidence from Australia
- Tying to Foreclose in Two-Sided Markets
- Smoking within the Household: Spousal Peer Effects and Children’s Health Implications
- The Dynamics of Offshoring and Institutions
- Long-Run Effects of Catholic Schooling on Wages
- The Interdependence of Immigration Restrictions and Expropriation Risk
- The Effects of Extensive and Intensive Margins of FDI on Domestic Employment: Microeconomic Evidence from Italy
- Are You There God? It’s Me, a College Student: Religious Beliefs and Higher Education