A flat tax on income is horizontally equitable (everyone pays the same rate) but may be vertically inequitable (the same 20 percent is a minor inconvenience for a high earner and a significant hardship for a low earner, given diminishing marginal utility of income). A highly progressive income tax may be vertically equitable (higher incomes bear greater burden) but may reduce the efficiency of labor supply and capital allocation if marginal rates become high enough to discourage productive effort. Most tax and transfer policy debates turn precisely on this tension — not whether to value efficiency or equity, but where to draw the line between them.
The quick distinction
Efficiency asks: are resources being used to create the maximum possible value? Are the right goods being produced in the right quantities at minimum cost? The efficiency criterion is concerned with the size of the economic pie.
Equity asks: is the distribution of resources and outcomes fair? Are people in similar circumstances treated similarly? Are burdens and benefits allocated in proportion to ability and need? The equity criterion is concerned with how the pie is divided.
| Efficiency | Equity | |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Maximize total value | Distribute value fairly |
| Standard | P = MC; no waste | Equal treatment; proportionality |
| Failure | Deadweight loss | Discrimination; poverty; extreme inequality |
| Policy example | Competitive markets, Pigouvian taxes | Progressive taxation, transfer payments |
Equity, explained
Horizontal equity: equals should be treated equally — people with the same income, circumstances, or needs should face the same prices, taxes, and treatment. Horizontal equity violations occur when otherwise identical people receive different outcomes based on characteristics irrelevant to the criterion (race, gender, political connections).
Vertical equity: unequals should be treated proportionally — those with greater capacity should bear greater burdens; those with greater need should receive greater support. Progressive taxation embodies vertical equity: the marginal utility of a dollar falls as income rises, so proportional sacrifice requires higher rates at higher incomes.
The IRS data on tax incidence documents both dimensions: the progressivity of the federal income tax (vertical equity), and whether taxpayers with equal income in different circumstances face equal effective rates (horizontal equity gaps from credits and deductions).
How to keep them straight
Efficiency analysis asks: does this policy increase or decrease total economic surplus, and by how much? Equity analysis asks: who bears the costs and receives the benefits, and is that distribution fair?
The Congressional Budget Office's distributional analyses explicitly separate these: every major budget proposal is scored for both its total economic effect (efficiency) and its distributional impact by income quintile (equity). Both dimensions are necessary for complete policy evaluation — neither alone is sufficient.
Some policies improve both efficiency and equity simultaneously. Removing tax expenditures that primarily benefit the wealthy can both raise revenue more efficiently and reduce vertical inequity. Investing in early childhood education generates long-run human capital that is both an efficiency gain (higher productivity) and an equity gain (reducing the advantage of being born to educated parents). These "win-win" policies deserve priority — they are rarer than either pure-efficiency or pure-equity advocates would claim, but they exist and should be identified and pursued.





