Ethnicity of people receiving Sole Parent Support
in NZ
June 2015 quarter, % of recipientshttps://t.co/XPTgKtsCPK pic.twitter.com/oB2Syaqj0C— Figure.NZ (@FigureNZ) January 31, 2016
Ethnicity of people receiving Sole Parent Support in NZ
01 Feb 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality, welfare reform Tags: Maori economic development, single mothers, single parents, welfare state
All-in average personal income tax rate less cash transfers at average wage for married couple with 2 children across OECD
31 Jan 2016 3 Comments
by Jim Rose in public economics Tags: asymmetric marriage premium, family tax credit, in work tax credit, marriage and divorce, social insurance, welfare state
All-in average personal income tax rate less cash transfers at average wage for single person with 2 children across OECD
30 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in public economics Tags: family tax credit, single mothers, single parents, social insurance, taxation and labour supply, welfare state
@garethmorgannz @geoffsimmonz the public choice illogic of the UBI
27 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality, public economics Tags: family tax credit, growth of government, negative income tax, size of government, social insurance, universal basic income, welfare state
Things are pretty grim when your ideas for fixing child poverty by throwing a lot more money at the problem are easily outclassed by the Greens in terms of economic rationale, fiscal sense and political practicality.
Source: Greens launch billion dollar plan to reduce child poverty | Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand.
But that is the case for Gareth Morgan’s proposals for a universal basic income for New Zealand. His proposal for a universal basic income funded by comprehensive capital tax make much less sense than those of the Greens for giving the in work family tax credit for those do not work but are on a welfare benefit.
The Greens have a far superior proposal for reducing child poverty and a far better chance of getting it implemented in parliament. Their proposal is simply to introduce a parental tax credit and give the in work tax credit to those currently on the benefit to increase their incomes.
Gareth Morgan’s solution to child poverty is to give billions of dollars to adults not in poverty and leave those who are in poverty worse off under the universal basic income. It is obvious which of these is more likely to attract political support and provoke resistance from taxpayers and political parties willing to court those are opposed to great big new taxes.
One of the economic reforms in the 1980s and 1990s that saved the welfare state was more efficient taxes and more efficient government spending. The targeting of government social spending reduce growth in the overall tax burden and therefore the political resistance it provoked.
Government spending grew in many countries in the 20th century because of demographic shifts, more efficient taxes, more efficient spending, a shift in the political power from those taxed to those subsidised, shifts in political power among taxed groups, and shifts in political power among subsidised groups. Sam Peltzman argues that:
governments grow where groups which share a common interest in that growth and can perceive and articulate that interest become more numerous.
The median voter in all countries was alive to the power of incentives and to not killing the goose that laid the golden egg. After 1980, the taxed, regulated and subsidised groups had an increased incentive to converge on new lower cost modes of redistribution.
More efficient taxes, more efficient spending, more efficient regulation and a more efficient state sector reduced the burden of taxes on the taxed groups. Most subsidised groups benefited as well because their needs were met in ways that provoked less political opposition.
@garethmorgannz @geoffsimmonz labour supply effects of UBI @dpfdpf https://t.co/rvrJSKI3LF pic.twitter.com/wsU5GLhGYH
— Jim Rose (@JimRosenz) January 26, 2016
Gary Becker and Casey Mulligan in Deadweight Costs and the Size of Government (NBER Working Paper Number No. 6789) concluded that flatter and broader taxes encourage bigger government. This is because taxpayers offer less resistance to increases in flat tax rates than to more onerous and less efficient forms of taxation. Any decline in the resistance of taxpayers to taxes leads to larger governments since an endless number of groups lobby to divide up the large revenue base.
An inefficient tax system or spending program from the standpoint of optimal tax theory can improve taxpayer welfare this so-called inefficient system creates additional political pressure for suppressing the growth of government. Inefficient taxes do not raise much revenue and therefore do not support a large sized government.
A switch to more efficient taxes through tax reforms allows governments to raise the same amount or larger amount of revenue for the same level of political resistance from taxpayers. This is because less revenue and output is wasted by discouraging labour supply, investment, savings and investment in capital with high marginal rates of tax on narrower tax basis.
The rising deadweight losses of taxes, transfers and regulation all limit the political value of inefficient redistributive policies. Tax and regulatory policies that are found to significantly cut the total wealth available for redistribution by governments are avoided relative to the germane counter-factual, which are other even costlier modes of redistribution.
Long live the Slopegraph. Long live Edward Tufte. tinyurl.com/naeh7rc http://t.co/C8Lgnupxz9—
Amity Shlaes (@AmityShlaes) May 16, 2015
Everyone can gain from converging on more efficient modes redistribution. The tax burden is less than otherwise. Government spending is more than a wise because taxes are raised with less deadweight social costs.
An improvement in the efficiency of either taxes or spending reduces political pressure from taxed and regulated groups for suppressing the growth of government and thereby increases total tax revenue and spending because there is less political opposition. Improvements in the efficiency of taxes, regulation and in spending reduce political pressure from the taxed and regulated groups in society.
The post-1980 reforms of Thatcher, Reagan, Clinton, Hawke and Keating, Lange and Douglas and others saved the modern welfare state. Their moves towards more efficient taxes and better targeted social spending did reduce growth in government spending but also prevented even larger cuts to social spending since 1980 at the behest of the increasingly restive taxpayer.
Social spending growth did temper after 1980 but the level of spending was larger than otherwise because of the extra revenue raised through more efficient taxes – more efficient taxes which provoked less political opposition.
More efficient taxes, more efficient spending, more efficient regulation and a more efficient state sector reduced the burden on the taxed groups while still supporting extensive but more tempered social spending.
Why the Guardian is wrong on UBI https://t.co/cr9Ougi4iV
— Gareth Morgan (@garethmorgannz) December 16, 2015
Governments everywhere hit a brick wall in terms of their ability to raise further tax revenues. Political parties of the Left and Right recognised this new reality. Gareth Morgan has not when he proposes a great big new tax to fund his universal basic income.
Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies – Groucho Marx
— Old Whig. 🇺🇲🇸🇪🇫🇮🇪🇪🇦🇹 (@aClassicLiberal) October 27, 2014
Billions of extra dollars in revenue must be raised and political resistance provoked to his proposed comprehensive capital tax to fund a universal basic income for those who are not poor. Child poverty is not reduced by a universal basic income because single parents and the children receive no more income support from government than before.
Which has more political legs? The Greens’ proposal to raise taxes by $1 billion to fight child poverty or the proposal by Gareth Morgan to raise taxes by 10 times that and have less impact on child poverty?
@JimRose69872629 @garethmorgannz @dpfdpf alternatively you could base your graph on something relevant. https://t.co/aGkqdX4gvb
— Geoff Simmons (@geoffsimmonz) January 26, 2016
The current and future governments of New Zealand have enough on their plate to work out how to fund a universal old age pension and health spending without giving away billions of dollars to the non-poor through an universal basic income.
US, Danish and NZ long-term male unemployment @grantrobertson1 @nzlabour
19 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in Euro crisis, great recession, job search and matching, labour economics, macroeconomics, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, unemployment Tags: Denmark, employment law, employment protection, flexicurity, labour market regulation, social insurance, welfare state
https://twitter.com/KiwiLiveNews/status/688503382181449728
My search for an example of how Danish flexicurity might have an advantage over the status quo in the New Zealand labour market is still to yield results. Danish flexicurity is no better than New Zealand and often worse in keeping long-term male unemployment rates down as the charts below show. The flexicurity model combines flexible hiring and firing with a generous social safety net and an extensive system of activation policies for the unemployed.
Data extracted on 18 Jan 2016 21:55 UTC (GMT) from OECD.Stat.
The charts above and below do show is that a more generous social safety net for the unemployed introduced with the onset of the Great Recession in the USA was followed by a sharp increase in the incidence of long-term unemployment.
Data extracted on 18 Jan 2016 21:55 UTC (GMT) from OECD.Stat.
1996 US welfare reforms & single mother employment rates @garethmorgannz @geoffsimmonz
13 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in gender, labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, welfare reform Tags: 1996 US welfare reforms, female labour force participation, maternal labour force participation, single mothers, single parents, social insurance, welfare state
Source: Ron Haskins (2015).
Poverty Rates by Mothers’ Marital Status, 1987 to 2013
13 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in applied welfare economics, economic history, labour economics, labour supply, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, welfare reform Tags: child poverty, family poverty, single mothers, single parents, social insurance, welfare state
Source: Congressional Research Service.https://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R41917.pdf
@GarethMorgannz the universal basic income is inferior to the minimum family tax credit
20 Dec 2015 4 Comments
by Jim Rose in labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality, public economics, welfare reform Tags: Aaron Director, Director's Law, Gareth Morgan, negative income tax, social insurance, universal basic income, welfare state
Gareth Morgan’s universal basic income appears to make everybody better off except those for whom the modern welfare state was established to protect. Examples of these from his online calculator are single mothers and retirees.
Source: The Big Kahuna – Tax and Welfare.
To stay even just with single mothers blows a good $10 billion hole in the budget deficit according to the online calculator provided by Gareth Morgan. Retirees are still worse off.
Source: The Big Kahuna – Tax and Welfare.
Central to the package is a comprehensive capital gains tax despite evidence growing with each day that the optimal tax rates on income from capital and on capital gains are zero.
A universal basic income for New Zealand is a long trip to where we are now. There is already a guaranteed minimum family income in New Zealand.
The minimum family tax credit makes sure that a family’s annual income (net income after tax has been deducted) doesn’t fall below $23,036 a year ($443 per week). To qualify, you must work for a salary or wage for at least 30 hours each week as a couple, or 20 hours each week as a single parent, and receive a family tax credit.
The Treasury modelled a Guaranteed Minimum income at the request of the Welfare Working Group in 2010. A guaranteed minimum income of $300 per week – the mean benefit income among those on benefits – would cost $44.5 billion or $52.6 billion if we extended it to super annuitants as a replacement for NZ Superannuation or old age pension. The former could be covered by a flat personal income tax rate of 45.4%; the latter, 48.6%. Full fiscal neutrality would require tax rates of 50.6% and 54.4%.
Why the Guardian is wrong on UBI https://t.co/cr9Ougi4iV
— Gareth Morgan (@garethmorgannz) December 16, 2015
The universal basic income seems to be a big day out for Director’s Law of Public Expenditure. Director’s Law is public expenditure is used primary for the benefit of the middle class, and is financed with taxes which are borne in considerable part by the poor and the rich.
The universal basic income and a comprehensive capital gains tax seems to cause a lot of economic upheaval but still struggles to make the worse off groups in society even break-even on this throwing of all the cards in the air. Brian Easton put it well the other day when he said:
Many advocates put the UMI forward without doing the sums. Those who do, find that the required tax rates are horrendous or the minimum income is so low that it is not a viable means of eliminating poverty. Among the latter are New Zealanders Douglas, Gareth Morgan and Keith Rankin.
Income sources of older people in USA, Canada, France, Germany, Australia and New Zealand
18 Dec 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in labour economics, labour supply, public economics Tags: economics of retirement, old-age pension, older workers, social insurance, welfare state
Old age poverty rates in the G7, Australia, New Zealand and Korea
17 Dec 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in labour economics, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, public economics Tags: old age poverty, old-age pension, social insurance, welfare state
@NovakMikayla on middle-class welfare in Australia
27 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality, welfare reform Tags: Australia, middle-class welfare, social insurance, welfare state
How Scandinavian Countries Pay for Their Government Spending
20 Nov 2015 1 Comment
by Jim Rose in politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, Public Choice, public economics Tags: Denmark, Finland, growth of government, Norway, Scandinavia, size of government, Sweden, taxation and entrepreneurship, taxation and investment, taxation and labour supply, welfare state
Ever wonder how Scandinavian countries pay for their government spending? https://t.co/GSqNeB70oC @kpomerleau pic.twitter.com/SIgU8drlQc
— Tax Foundation (@TaxFoundation) November 13, 2015
Poverty in America since 1960
19 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in economic history, labour economics, labour supply, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, welfare reform Tags: child poverty, family poverty, social insurance, welfare reform, welfare state
% of Americans in Poverty since 1960s bit.ly/195NbKb http://t.co/F2E6qUfRVP—
Catherine Mulbrandon (@VisualEcon) October 28, 2014
The minimum wage and poverty
14 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in labour economics, minimum wage, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, poverty and inequality Tags: child poverty, family poverty, family tax credits, in-work tax credits, social insurance, welfare state
Employment status of sole parents in UK, USA, France, Italy, Australia, Ireland and New Zealand
13 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
by Jim Rose in economics of love and marriage, labour supply, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA Tags: Australia, British economy, France, Ireland, Italy, maternal labour supply, single parents, sole parents, welfare state
Despite supposedly having stingy welfare states, both New Zealand and Australia have a lot of sole parents who do not work at all. There is no separate breakdown of full-time and part-time work status in the USA. About 72% of sole parents in the USA either work full-time or part-time.

Source: OECD Family Database.

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