The Distributional Effect of Taxes in Korea: Empirical Evidence by Using 1991 Household Data
DC Field Value Language
dc.relation https://www.kipf.re.kr/thumbnail/kiPublish/Publish/Attach/Old/thumbnail/300_J0000015205a.gif -
dc.contributor.author 현진권 -
dc.date.accessioned 2026-01-27T14:16:20Z -
dc.date.available 2026-01-27T14:16:20Z -
dc.date.created 1996-12-01 -
dc.date.issued 1996-12-01 -
dc.description.abstract This Study shows the distributional effect of taxes by using 1991 Korean household micro-date. Urban and rural household data are merged into one dataset for the analsysis. We gross-up urban household survey data following the method developed by Atkinson, Gomulka, and Sutherland(1988). We apply several indices to measure the level of income distribution and distributional effect of taxes. Our data on income distributon in Korea before taxes and social security benefits shows that the bottom 10% income group has 3.09% of the total income, and the top 10% income group has 25.01%, corresponding to a Gini coefficient of 0.3138. The Korean progressive income tax system shows distributional effects, yielding Gini coefficients that ranged from 0.3138 to 0.2975. However, indirect taxes including the special excise tax,liquor tax, and value added tax do not have the distributional effect. -
dc.identifier.uri https://ir.kipf.re.kr/handle/201201/1253 -
dc.publisher KIPF -
dc.subject.keyword 주택소유 -
dc.subject.keyword 소득분배 -
dc.subject.keyword 지니계수 -
dc.subject.other E1 -
dc.title The Distributional Effect of Taxes in Korea: Empirical Evidence by Using 1991 Household Data -
dc.type BOOK -
dc.citation.page 18 -
메타데이터 간략히 보기

File Downloads

  • 관련 파일이 존재하지 않습니다.

공유

qrcode
공유하기

Total Views & Downloads