Why focus on progressive taxes and not on progressive transfers?

Many posts in the economics blogosphere on the subject of progressive taxation today: Greg Mankiw discusses this paper, Mark Thoma points us to a WSJ article, and Brad DeLong  links to Mark’s post twice (here and here).

Inequality – both its level and the rate at which it has been increasing in Canada and the US – is a serious issue. But taxing the rich (and dealing with the resulting incentive effects) isn’t the only policy instrument at our disposal; we can also reduce inequality by directed transfers to low-income households.

A couple of weeks ago, at the meetings of the Canadian Economics Association, Andrew Jackson presented a paper with the following table:
Jackson

I’ve just ordered the Pontusson reference upon which this table was based, so I’ll come back to this point as soon as I can. But it looks very much as though the Nordic countries – which are rich, devote a large fraction of their income to social programs and which do fairly well in reducing inequality – seem to have given up on tax policy as an instrument for income redistribution.

5 comments

  1. John Jensen's avatar
    John Jensen · · Reply

    [I really enjoy your blog and find every post to be very thoughtful and interesting]
    Being a citizen of Canada and of one of the Nordic countries, I agree the Nordics have largely forsaken the tax policy you describe. This is IMHO as much due to efficacy reasons as to cultural ones — their citizens are more agreeable to the higher involvement of the state in their daily lives that these sorts of policies naturally entail.

  2. reason's avatar

    And I think this needs to be more widely read – I’ll try and get Mark Thoma to pick this up.
    I happen to have always thought this – mainly because income is so hard to define and because it is hard to define progressive tax systems that don’t have perverse effects on savings and investment.

  3. thwap's avatar

    Okay, I don’t follow and I’m lazy. Where are the revenues for the transfers supposed to come from if not from progressive taxation?

  4. Stephen Gordon's avatar

    The short answer is consumption taxes. A longer answer is here, and I’m working on an even longer version that I hope to post in a couple of days.

  5. thwap's avatar

    Ah yes! I remember you now.

Leave a comment