Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Revenue Evaluation at the Local level?

A good government revenue system should distribute the burden across residents in a manner that is consistent with the accepted norms of fairness and equity. These norms typically define fairness according to the relationship between the amount of revenue collected from residents and their respective abilities to pay the tax, charge, fee or assessment along with the benefits received by them from government programs. Three widely-accepted norms of fairness are:
Vertical Equity. This principle of fairness requires that the amount of revenue collected from residents with different income levels should reflect their respective abilities to pay the tax, charge, fee or assessment. Specifically, the cost of government as a percentage of income should not unduly burden taxpayers with limited ability to pay. Some would view this principle as satisfied by a proportional revenue system, where revenues collected are the same percentage of income for taxpayers at all income levels. Others believe that the principle requires that revenues collected as a percentage of income should be higher for residents with more income than those with less income (a progressive tax burden). To our knowledge, almost no one believes that revenues collected should be a higher percentage of income for less affluent residents than for those with more income (a regressive tax burden).
Benefits Received. A revenue system may be considered fair if the revenues collected are matched by benefits received by a resident from the government. This principle is most relevant when a cost is charged specifically for the purpose of providing a particular government service to a specific group of residents. Such “benefit charges” are impractical for much of government spending because the “benefits” received cannot be determined for each resident. Therefore, this principle is relevant mainly for certain types of selective fees, charges and assessments which are termed user fees.
Horizontal Equity. According to this principle, residents with similar abilities to pay a tax should pay comparable amounts of the costs. More generally, the principle of horizontal equity enjoins the government from levying charges that have arbitrary and peculiar distributions of costs across residents or from levying dissimilar tax burdens on taxpayers that are not justified by differences in their ability to pay or by distinctions in the benefits they receive from government programs.

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