Notes on the Front

Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU

Economic Common Sense and the Low-Paid. The Recession Diaries – July 8th

Recession 250 Social Justice Ireland has produced a well-argued proposal for refundable tax credits – a long-standing demand to make the tax system more equitable. In essence, as SJI describes it:

‘A refundable tax credit is one where, in the event that the income of an individual is insufficient to use up all of his or her tax credit, the remaining credit is paid to the individual by means of a cash transfer.’

Let explain this by example: Mary earns €15,000 a year. Her gross tax liability is €3,000 (20 percent of her earnings). Her tax credit is €3,600. This offsets any tax liability. But – and this is the key issue behind refundable tax credits – she has €600 of ‘unused’ credits.

A tax credit is, in effect, a cash subsidy – one that is delivered by reducing one’s tax bill. Anyone above the income tax threshold, by definition, uses up all their credits. But those below the income tax threshold don’t. Therefore, they don’t get the full subsidy. What SJI proposes in simplicity itself –return the ‘unused’ portion of the tax credits to the worker in the form of a cash transfer. This is nothing more or less than treating all taxpayers equally.

Such a programme – costing €140 million – would benefit low-income workers and families. SJI estimates that over 113,000 low-income workers would get a refundable tax credit. Of this, 40 percent of the beneficiaries (recipients and dependents) would come from below-poverty line households. The average returned credit would amount to nearly €24 per week – a substantial boost to low-incomes.

SJI rightly poses this proposal in terms of tax justice and social equity. However, there is more: refundable tax credits make economic common-sense. It will increase demand and consumption, raise tax revenues, help protect jobs and boost the GDP. The net effect on the Exchequer will be plus. In other words, this is a great stimulus programme. Let’s churn some numbers with an old friend – the marginal propensity to consume.

We can reasonably assume that low-income earners will consume most of any extra income they receive. Let’s say the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) for low-income earners is 0.75 – that is, they earners spend 75 percent of an extra Euro. If this holds for the entire refundable tax credit, low-income earners will spend €105 million (75 percent of the total cost of €140 million).

There are two positive benefits to this:

  • First is the multiplier effect: spending increases businesses cash flow which in turns helps secure jobs. The IMF suggests that ‘targeted transfers’ (to what they call ‘hand-to-mouth’ households) are the second most effective form to boosting economic growth, even if temporary; the first being capital spending.
  • Second, the Exchequer – through increased tax revenues.

Conservatively, if we assume that households will spend 75 percent of the refunded tax credit and that of the spend, 12 percent represents indirect taxation as per the ESRI / Combat Poverty Agency, then the Exchequer will receive a boost of €13 million. This, of course, excludes any extra revenue arising from the general boost to GDP growth (business taxes, their purchases arising from increased sales, etc.).

At the other end, if we assume that in the first year GDP will increase by a multiplier of 1.2 (that is, GDP grows by €168 million from the total cost of the refundable tax credit) and further assume that the GDP / tax ratio holds (approximately 30 percent), the Exchequer will benefit by €50 million.

In real life, the boost to revenue will lie somewhere between €13 and €50 million.

So how do we pay for this? It is far, far preferable to pay for such measures – which don’t embed an asset into the economy as would be done with capital spending – out of current resources. But we’re broke! How do we do this? Simple: take money from those who have a low MPC (i.e. high income groups) and give it to people with a high MPC – the IMF’s ‘hand-to-mouth’ households. No borrowing, no fuss.

I have a small suggestion. According to Fine Gael, those who receive income via rental and dividend income are exempt from the Health Contribution Levy. This amounts to a taxpayers’ subsidy worth €89 million. Therefore, remove the subsidy by applying the levy to this income. If we were to apply the 4 percent levy to net capital gains and inheritances, we could raise another €92 million.

These are not ‘soak the rich’ proposals – merely treating all income equally. And it would raise €181 million. This would pay for the refundable tax credit and leave some change over to reduce the deficit (or invest it into a capital spend projects to get people back to work, raise more tax revenue and reduce unemployment costs).

There’s another boost to the economy. By taking money off high-income groups, we are not only reducing the deflationary impact of increased taxes, we may even be reducing import-dense consumer spending. High income groups’ spending is likely to contain more imports. For instance, 76 percent of all hotel expenditure abroad, which helps other economies but not ours, comes from the top 20 percent of households. Those on lower-incomes are likely to spend more on domestically produced products.

So if we take money off high income groups and give it to the low-income groups, not only do we boost economic growth, increase tax revenue – we reduce ‘leakage’ and ensure more of our spending stays in the economy.

All this to say – proposals like the SJI’s refundable tax credit are not only fair, but good for the economy in all sorts of ways. While the Government is dreaming up ways to take more money off the low-paid, we should be working on creative ways to invest in income equality, public services, poverty-reduction, etc. These are not luxuries, these are absolutely essential to a prosperous economy and sustainable growth.

In other words, people and their living standards are not an obstacle to economic growth, they are the solution. When we understand that, we will begin to understand how we get out of this mess.

8 responses to “Economic Common Sense and the Low-Paid. The Recession Diaries – July 8th”

  1. SAM Avatar

    Michael,
    An excellent article – as usual.In the debate on how to rescue Ireland from tha situation we are in or how to keep digging a bigger hole to bury the country, it seems to me that the diggers are masters of the snappy phrase which gets to the point quickly. This tends to win the argument as it suits the media. Progressives need short phrases that get the message accross quickly. In this regard yours that “people and their living standards are not an obstacle to economic growth, they are the solution” is perfect. Well done!

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  2. Gerard O'Neill Avatar

    It’s not a bad idea, for CORI. It even has the advantage of reducing the disincentive effects experienced by people leaving social welfare to take up jobs who then face absurdly high marginal tax rates and little (or negative) changes to their incomes.
    But the bit about about rich people spending more on imports than poor people? Come on Michael: all those TVs and cars folks like to watch and drive – I wasn’t aware of any indigenous manufacturers here in Ireland…
    Let’s just let folks – richer or poorer – spend the money they earn they way they see fit rather than getting lost in ‘ourselves alone’ rabbit holes. And sure, treat incomes, whatever their source, fairly and equitably.

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  3. Michael Taft Avatar

    Thanks for that, SAM. Its frustrating that the debate is so one-sided. There are few mainstream outlets that are concerned with hosting a debate where a number of viewpoints can be aired, to the betterment of the debate. All one can do is keep at it. When things don’t turn out as anticipated, hopefully there will be a turning towards alternative perspectives.
    Gerard – far be it from me to prevent Montgomery Burns from buying another ivory backscratcher (well, actually, I would – the sale of ivory products should be criminalised); but you get my point. All I was doing was pointing out one of many benefits that arise out of redistributionist policies. One could produce a lengthy list, espcially considering the benefits arising from greater income equality. Don’t take my word for it – have a wander through this excellent site – the Equality Trust http://www.equalitytrust.org.uk/
    Indeed, if we pursue enough egalitarian poliicies we might even close that ol’ marginal propensity to import gap: plasma TVs for everyone!

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  4. Mack Avatar

    Let’s just let folks – richer or poorer – spend the money they earn they way they see fit rather than getting lost in ‘ourselves alone’ rabbit holes. And sure, treat incomes, whatever their source, fairly and equitably.
    By and large I’m in favour of that Gerard. But I’m also increasingly concerned with the continuing rise of winner-takes-all tournament style wage schemes that funnel all of the economies productivity gains into the hands of senior management. If senior managers insist on continuing to do this, the state should play some role in democratising those gains.
    Median household incomes in the USA have barely budged since the mid-1980’s.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:US_real_median_household_income_1967_-_2008.png
    If that trend is replicated in Ireland (I presume real household incomes did rise for everyone during the boom?) then surely combining high marginal tax rates with generous tax credits (including the Milton Friedman-like Negative Tax Rate proposed above) is a good solution to that problem?
    If we are to implement this, why not scrap the lower marginal rate (which would offer everyone the same tax breaks at the same tax rate), scrap all ‘ceilings’ and perhaps even increase the top rate and tax credits?

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  5. Mack Avatar

    I did a quick search and couldn’t find either ‘hours’ or ‘pro-rata’.
    This would be offered on a pro-rata basis? Or at least on the basis that an equivalent amount wasn’t extracted in dole payments?

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  6. Michael Taft Avatar

    Mack – I hope to be some work in the next couple of weeks on household income growth, to assess where the money went.
    What do you mean by hours or pro-rata? SJI’s proposal deals with personal and PAYE tax credits only, those earning more than €4,000 and less than €15,600, and had 40 insurable weeks in the year. Also, they must be over 22 years.

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  7. Mack Avatar

    Michael –
    What I mean is people working a day or two a year just to take advantage, probably shouldn’t get their tax credits refunded. Especially if they’ve also recieved benefits.
    I don’t see why they should have to be over 22. If an 18 year old has worked enough hours but isn’t earning enough to use all the tax credits then they should get a refund too.
    It’s most likely going to benefit married couples most – where one is in full-time employment (so tax credits are higher – perhaps double – if the other does some work).

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  8. Mack Avatar

    By the way, I did a quick & very basic outline of what an high flat tax, high tax credit, negative income tax system could look like here..
    http://sluggerotoole.com/2010/07/08/time-to-scrap-the-lower-marginal-rate/

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Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU