Higher Marginal Tax Rates Reduce Income Mobility, Especially at the Bottom

DEAD7

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FEBRUARY 24, 2016 1:36PM

Higher Marginal Tax Rates Reduce Income Mobility, Especially at the Bottom
By CHARLES HUGHES
Higher Marginal Tax Rates Reduce Income Mobility, Especially at the Bottom


Calls for higher tax rates often suffer from a myopic focus on the one percent, but these proposals largely fail to acknowledge that tax rates, and the incentives they create, influence work decisions for everyone. Nowhere is narrow focus more evident than the tax proposals from the two rivals for the Democratic nomination. Bernie Sanders has proposed more than $19 trillion in new taxes over the next decade, and Hillary Clinton’s own plans only look modest by comparison. My colleague Alan Reynolds briefly alluded to a recent paper from Mario Alloza of University College London that examines the relationship between tax rates and income mobility. He finds that higher marginal tax rates reduced mobility over the period analyzed, particularly for people with low incomes or less education. These findings imply that proposals to significantly increase taxes could make it harder for people at the bottom of the income distribution to work their way up.

Alloza looks at panel data between 1967 and 1996 to examine whether tax rates affect the probability of staying in the same decile in the following two years. He examines different scenarios including pre-tax, post-tax and post-tax and transfer. Most of the paper focuses on federal taxes, but he also examines a case where state and payroll taxes are included as well. Increases in the marginal tax rate are associated with a reduction in short-run relative income mobility. Households are roughly 6 percent more likely to stay in the same income quintile when the marginal tax rate is increased by one percentage point. This mechanism holds for all of the different tax and transfer scenarios. Even accounting for the impact of transfers and benefits, higher rates curbed the upward mobility of people at the lower end of the income distribution. This suggests that the impact of tax rates on income mobility is not confined to redistribution effects, but the changes in labor market incentives.

These effects are even more pronounced for people with low-income or less than a college degree. Tax changes focused on compressing the income distribution by taking more from those at the top could also make it harder for these people at the bottom to climb the economic ladder. When Alloza restricts his sample to non-college households, he finds that a one percentage point increase in the marginal tax rate increases the probability of moving down to lower deciles by roughly one percent, increases the likelihood of remaining in the same decile by roughly the same amount, and reduces the probability of moving up to a higher income decile by almost one and a half percent. For households in the lowest income decile, an increase in the marginal tax rate reduces their probability of moving up to a higher decile by almost one and half percent in the post-tax and transfer scenario. Higher marginal tax rates reduce the mobility for these groups in particular.

These results provide more evidence that taxes matter for all people when they make decisions about work. Higher tax rates limit income mobility by changing work incentives, particularly for people near the bottom of the income distribution. Public policy should not further reduce the scope of opportunity for these people, and increasing tax rates would likely do just that.
 

88m3

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a 1% increase in taxes in exchange for single payer health care is not going to make broke people worse off. rich people will feel it a little bit, though...

What do professionals see in pay raises a year again 1-3% if they're lucky? Who are you fooling?

:heh:
 

88m3

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im focused on the bottom of the economic ladder

the income cap for medicaid is around 17k for individuals

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act significantly expanded both eligibility for and federal funding of Medicaid. Under the law as written, all U.S. citizens and legal residents with income up to 133% of the poverty line, including adults without dependent children, would qualify for coverage in any state that participated in the Medicaid program. However, the United States Supreme Court ruled in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius that states do not have to agree to this expansion in order to continue to receive previously established levels of Medicaid funding, and many states have chosen to continue with pre-ACA funding levels and eligibility standards.


Want to give it another shot?
 

Tate

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I actually want no social mobility
 

NZA

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the income cap for medicaid is around 17k for individuals

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act significantly expanded both eligibility for and federal funding of Medicaid. Under the law as written, all U.S. citizens and legal residents with income up to 133% of the poverty line, including adults without dependent children, would qualify for coverage in any state that participated in the Medicaid program. However, the United States Supreme Court ruled in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius that states do not have to agree to this expansion in order to continue to receive previously established levels of Medicaid funding, and many states have chosen to continue with pre-ACA funding levels and eligibility standards.


Want to give it another shot?
i dont know how it is in new york but in arizona, many broke people cant even get medicaid.
 

acri1

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They don't have those?

Not really.

My mother is divorced and in her 50s and makes <30k/yr working part time, and her job doesn't provide health insurance. Even with Obamacare, her insurance still costs almost $200/mo, and at the time she signed up she had no major health issues outside of being a smoker. If I wasn't around to pay for it I'm not sure she could afford it. So yeah, healthcare is still an issue.


Last time I checked college was pretty hard to pay for if you're poor as well. If raising taxes 1% would help get single-payer and/or more state funding for colleges, seems like a good tradeoff to me.
 
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