合法大麻产业的税收和市场力量

Brett Hollenbeck, Kosuke Uetake
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引用次数: 31

摘要

2012年,华盛顿州制定了大麻生产和零售的法律框架。美国其他9个州和加拿大也纷纷效仿。这些州希望在限制大麻消费危害的同时,为州预算增加税收。我们使用一个独特的管理数据集,其中包含华盛顿行业历史上的所有交易,以评估决策者正在考虑的不同税收和监管政策的有效性,并研究不完全竞争在决定这些结果中的作用。我们研究3个主要的研究问题。首先,华盛顿的消费税在增加财政收入方面效果如何?由于美国对大麻的税率最高,华盛顿是将税收最大化,还是可能会过度征税,导致合法销售减少,税收减少。第二,这个行业的税种是什么?最后,大多数州都限制进入,导致公司拥有巨大的市场力量。不完全竞争在研究这些税收政策基本问题中的作用是什么?我们结合结构方法和简化形式的充分统计方法来显示一些结果。首先,华盛顿州37%的消费税仍处于拉弗曲线的向上倾斜部分,如果税率提高,州收入可能会大幅增加。由于零售商的市场力量,税收增加所产生的收入要比完全竞争下的收入大得多。此外,这些税收主要是由消费者而不是企业承担的,每增加一美元都有很大的社会成本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Taxation and Market Power in the Legal Marijuana Industry
In 2012 the state of Washington created a legal framework for production and retail sales of marijuana. Nine other U.S. states and Canada have followed. These states hope to generate tax revenue for their state budgets while limiting harms associated with marijuana consumption. We use a unique administrative dataset containing all transactions in the history of the industry in Washington to evaluate the effectiveness of different tax and regulatory policies under consideration by policymakers and study the role of imperfect competition in determining these results. We examine 3 main research questions. First, how effective is Washington’s excise tax at raising revenue? With the nation’s highest tax rate on marijuana, is Washington maximizing revenue or potentially overtaxing, leading to reduced legal sales and lower tax revenue. Second, what is the incidence of taxes in this industry? Finally, most states have restricted entry, resulting in firms with substantial market power. What is the role of imperfect competition in studying these basic questions on tax policy? We combine structural methods and a reduced form sufficient statistic approach to show a number of results. First, Washington’s 37% excise tax is still on the upward sloping portion of the Laffer curve and state revenue could be substantially higher with a higher tax rate. The amount of revenue generated by a tax increase is significantly larger due to retailer market power than it would be under perfect competition. In addition, these taxes are primarily borne by consumers and not by firms, and there is a large social cost associated with each dollar raised.
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