research paper · preprint
An open firm-level microsimulation of the UK VAT registration threshold
The paper builds an open synthetic population of UK businesses — calibrated to HMRC, ONS, and OBR statistics — and uses it to price level, shape, and rate reforms of the VAT registration threshold on a common base, with the threshold's dominated region as an elasticity-free measure of the distortion each reform removes.
- anchor result
- On a common £184.8bn 2023–24 base: raising the threshold to £100,000 costs £753m, a graduated taper £520m, and 10%/15% reduced-rate bands £484m/£242m.
- method
- 2.94M synthetic firm records weighted to 2.46M UK firms, calibrated to administrative band aggregates, with net liability built structurally from value added.
- discipline
- A placebo regenerated without the near-threshold targets returns zero excess mass — band-calibrated data support no bunching inference, so the paper computes no elasticities from bunching.
- author
- Vahid Ahmadi, PolicyEngine. Preliminary and incomplete; comments welcome.
paper
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