David Leite das Neves

Docteur de PSE

CV EN ANGLAIS
David Leite das Neves est sur le marché du travail
  • Paris School of Economics, EHESS
Groupes de recherche
THÈMES DE RECHERCHE
  • Microeconométrie
  • Patrimoine, revenu, redistribution et fiscalité
  • Politiques publiques
Contact

Adresse :48, boulevard Jourdan,
75014 Paris, France

À propos

En bref : David’s research interests lie at the intersection of public economics and public finance with a focus on tax system design. Using novel administrative data-sets his research investigates the role of tax evasion and tax enforcement for the measurement of reported and real income inequality.

  • David Leite das Neves est candidat sur le Job Market européen (EJME) et sur le réseau JOE

Thème de recherche principal : Public Economics

Thème de recherche secondaire : Labor Economics

Références : Thomas Piketty, Gabriel Zucman, Eric Zwick

Superviseur : Antoine Bozio

Job market paper

leite-david-jmp pdf 6,6 Mo

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Onglets

Welcome! I am a PhD candidate at the Paris School of Economics (PSE). 

My research addresses topics in public economics and public finance with a focus on tax system design by using novel administrative datasets. 

I am mostly interested on the role of tax evasion and tax enforcement for the measurement of reported and real income inequality.

On September 20, 2024 at 4:00 PM (Paris time), I defended my thesis Essays in Public Economics.

 

Jury:

M. Mario CENTENO, Nova University

Mme Joana NARITOMI, London School of Economics

M. Joel SLEMROD, University of Michigan

M. Gabriel ZUCMAN, ENS-PSL, PSE-Ecole d’économie de Paris

M. Eric ZWICK, University of Chicago

 

Thesis supervisor:

M. Antoine BOZIO, EHESS, PSE-Ecole d’économie de Paris

The Firm as Tax Shelter: Micro Evidence and Aggregate Implications  of Consumption Through the Firm

I present direct evidence that firms serve as tax-free consumption vehicles. Drawing on a unique combination of data from an electronic invoicing program in Portugal (e-Fatura), I show that individuals who control firms shift 36% of their monthly personal expenditures to firms and 31% of their household expenditures. The effects are driven by owner-managers of small closely held firms through expenditure categories on the border between business and final consumption but are widespread among business managers across the whole income distribution. My results suggest that the government revenue losses due to consumption through the firm amount to 1% of GDP. Reallocating the tax savings and personal expenditures hidden within firms to the reported household income of business managers increases the Gini by one percentage point and the top 1% income share by half a percentage point.

 

Tax Withholding and Earnings Supply: Evidence from Bunching at the Withholding Eligibility Threshold

This paper reveals taxpayers’ responses to the threshold for tax withholding. Relying on a large dataset of Portuguese tax returns for fiscal year 2017, I use bunching techniques to identify responses to effective or perceived tax incentives. First, I find no excess mass at the kinks in the tax schedule for wage earners and self-employed taxpayers. Second, I find that wage earners and self-employed workers in de facto employer–employee relationships strongly bunch at the annual values of the full-time minimum wage. Third, I find that “purely'” self-employed taxpayers — those deriving their income from many different payers — significantly bunch at the tax withholding eligibility threshold. I interpret these findings as revealing misperceptions about the tax system, as the withholding threshold is neutral with respect to the final tax liability. My results contribute to the design of socially optimal tax collection systems, particularly in contexts with progressive taxation and uncertain income.

Orsetta Causa & Nicolas Woloszko & David Leite, 2019. “Housing, wealth accumulation and wealth distribution: Evidence and stylized facts,” OECD Economics Department Working Papers 1588, OECD Publishing.

  • NBER Public Economics Program Spring Meeting, Cambridge, April 18-10, 2024 
  • CESifo Conference on Public Economics, Munich, March 21-23, 2024 
  • PSE-CEPR Policy Forum, Paris, June 27, 2023. 
  • Workshop on the Economics of Taxation, Universitat de Barcelona, May 31-June 1, 2023. 
  • Applied Economics Lunch Seminar, Paris School of Economics, June 7, 2022. 
  • 8th Annual Mannheim Taxation Conference, Virtual Edition, September 9-10, 2021. 
  • Online Public Finance Seminar (OPFS), Online, April 8, 2021. 
  • 76th Annual Congress of the IIPF, Virtual Edition, August 19-21, 2020.