Negative income tax
A negative income tax is a method of tax reform that is popular among economists but has never been fully implemented. It was developed by Juliet Rhys-Williams in the 1940s and later by United States economist Milton Friedman in 1962. It is commonly used as a method of implementing a guaranteed minimum income system.
Related Topics:
Juliet Rhys-Williams - 1940s - United States - Economist - Milton Friedman - 1962 - Guaranteed minimum income
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A negative income tax would replace the current progressive income tax system used throughout most of the western world. This would be replaced by a flat tax of, say, 25%, but each taxpayer would also be given $10,000 by the government. Thus a person earning only $4000 per year would pay $1000 in taxes, but overall would receive a net gain of $9,000 from the government. A person making $40,000 would be at the break-even point and would neither pay taxes nor receive any benefits. A person making $1,000,000 per year would pay close to the full 25% tax, as the $10,000 would count little towards relieving their tax burden.
Related Topics:
Progressive income tax - Flat tax
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Milton Friedman proposed a model in which a specified proportion of unused deductions or allowances would be refunded to the taxpayer. If, for a family of four the amount of allowances came out to $10,000, and the subsidy rate was 50% (the rate recommended by Friedman), and the family earned $6,000, the family would receive $2,000, because it left $4,000 of allowances unused, and therefore qualifies for $2,000, half that amount. Friedman feared high subsidy rates as those would lessen the incentive to obtain employment. He also warned that the negative income tax as an addition to the "ragbag" of welfare and assistance programs, would only worsen the problem of bureaucracy and waste. Instead, the negative income tax must gradually replace all other welfare and assistance programs. The negative income tax has come up in one form or another in Congress, but Friedman opposed it because it came packaged with other undesirable elements antithetical to the efficacy of the negative income tax. Source: Free to Choose.
Related Topics:
Milton Friedman - Free to Choose
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The proponents of negative income tax believe that its implementation would solve several problems with current systems. For example, they believe it would eliminate the welfare trap and the minimum wage. Although some people consider it tantamount to a social dividend, it can also be viewed as an employment subsidy, the main goal of which is reducing wage costs, especially for the lowest-qualified jobs. Seen in this light, the system appears more beneficial to labour-intensive industries than to capital-intensive ones. Some critics of the negative income tax contend that, in effect, such a scheme is a subsidy given to employers of low-qualified jobs, absolving them of the responsibility to adequately pay their workers.
Related Topics:
Welfare trap - Minimum wage
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Its main drawback is the same as any income-based tax system: it requires considerable expensive reporting and supervision in order to avoid fraud. In any case, the subsidy effect might well cause a long-term reduction in unemployment, though it would probably not have a long-term effect on net wages since in the absence of a legal minimum wage, employers would compensate for it by offering a lower gross wage.
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A negative income tax (NIT) can be but is not necessarily a guaranteed minimum income (GMI). A GMI has to provide enough money to survive on; a NIT could be as low as few hundred dollars and a 2% tax rate implemented by a city government. GMI systems also often have other major reforms, such as the elimination of the minimum wage and the ending of most current social welfare programs.
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While the notion has long been popular with economists, its implementation has never been politically feasible. This is partly because of the very complex and entrenched nature of most countries' current tax codes: they would have to be rewritten under any NIT system. However, some countries have seen the introduction of refundable (or non-wastable) tax credits which can be paid even when there is no tax liability to be offset.
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