Phase Transitions in Economic Inequality:Taxation and Extremal Replacement Dynamics
Lautaro Giordano, Sebastian Gon\c{c}alves, Jos\'e Roberto Iglesias, Mar\'ia Fabiana Laguna

TL;DR
This paper introduces a minimal agent-based model demonstrating how taxation schemes influence wealth distribution, revealing phase transitions, hysteresis, and the impact of redistribution on inequality.
Contribution
It shows that simple stochastic redistribution mechanisms can cause abrupt transitions and metastability in wealth inequality, depending on taxation structure.
Findings
Regressive taxation leads to wealth condensation and non-ergodic phases.
Increasing taxes causes a discontinuous transition between inequality regimes.
Progressive taxation suppresses wealth concentration and hysteresis.
Abstract
We present a minimal agent-based model of interacting agents characterized by their wealth to study taxation and inequality in a non-conservative economy. Wealth evolves through an extremal stochastic replacement process in which the poorest agent has its wealth replaced by a new random value, financed through a collective taxation mechanism. We explore taxation regimes ranging from regressive to progressive schemes and tune the overall redistribution strength. Under regressive taxation, the system self-organizes into two distinct stationary phases when changing the total tax collected: a non-ergodic, high-inequality regime characterized by wealth condensation in a subset of agents that permanently escape replacement, and a more homogeneous ergodic phase in which all agents participate in the dynamics. Increasing taxes drives an abrupt transition between these phases. The transition is…
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