Working Paper

Food Subsidies in General Equilibrium

Albert Jan Hummel, Vinzenz Ziesemer
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9201

The Atkinson-Stiglitz theorem on uniform consumption taxation breaks down if prices are endogenous. This paper investigates the implications for optimal food subsidies in China. To do so, we build a general equilibrium model where low-skilled workers have a comparative advantage in the production of food. Food subsidies raise the relative demand for low-skilled workers, which reduces the skill premium and indirectly redistributes income from high-skilled to low-skilled workers. We calibrate our model to match key moments from the Chinese economy, including sectoral production and spending patterns that we obtain from micro-level survey data. Our results suggest that general equilibrium effects rationalize food subsidies in the range 5%-12%.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Keywords: uniform consumption taxes, general equilibrium effects, food subsidies
JEL Classification: E640, H210, Q180