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Research Note 17 1996-97

Helping the Working Poor: An Earned Income Tax Rebate for Australia ?

Phil Hanratty
Economics, Commerce and Industrial Relations Group


Much attention is now being focused on ways to help the working poor (i.e. those with jobs but with income and assets below the poverty line). Increasing their wages can help but could reduce their employment if carried too far. Another relevant policy option is an Earned Income Tax Rebate (EITR). Reference is often made to the United States, which has utilised such a tax benefit scheme since 1975.(1)

The Nature of an EITR

An EITR reduces the income tax burden on low-paid workers through a tax rebate/credit which effectively increases the eligible taxpayer's tax-free threshold. These workers' tax burdens could be reduced to zero or could even become negative where the EITR is made 'refundable'. In such a case, actual money payments would be made to eligible persons/ families.

Only those on low 'earned income' (e.g. low wages and salaries and/or low self-employment income) and little other income would qualify for the EITR. Those with substantial 'unearned income' (e.g. interest receipts, dividends, rent and capital gains from assets) would not qualify for the EITR, regardless of their earned income. The proper classification of superannuation annuities/ pensions and social security payments into these earned versus unearned income categories is less clear and would require careful choice by those designing such a scheme for Australia.(2)

Australia's personal tax system already has a general Low Income Earner Rebate. For those fully eligible, in 1996-97 tax payable will be reduced by $150. The maximum rebate will be reduced by 4 cents for every dollar by which the taxpayer's annual taxable income exceeds $20,700 and no benefit will be available for those with taxable incomes above $24,450. An EITR could operate in a similar fashion, but would be available only to those on low earned incomes, and with unearned income below some threshold.

Rationales for an EITR

The United States scheme was originally put forward as a way of relieving the financial burden of the US social security payroll tax on low-wage working parents, using tax relief to compensate for compulsory contributions. More recently, it has been touted as a way of helping the poor to 'help themselves' by encouraging them to take work or to work more.

Both these issues are currently relevant to Australia and so consideration of an EITR here would seem worthwhile. In particular, an EITR might be an effective way of relieving the financial burden of compulsory superannuation payments on the after-tax incomes of low-wage workers in Australia and also of increasing the incentive to work for those now without jobs.

Up to now, compulsory superannuation contributions for low-wage workers have been formally paid by employers, but many economists would argue that a substantial portion (perhaps all) of the costs of such contributions have effectively been passed on to workers through gross wages being lower than they otherwise might be. An EITR might also be useful in passing on more of these costs, or in generally lowering labour costs by allowing lower gross wages and thus in helping to encourage higher employment growth.

Overall, an EITR would benefit low-wage workers either through higher after-tax incomes or through higher employment. If this is the justification for an EITR then it might be sensible to confine the definition of earned income to the wages and salaries which form the base for levying superannuation contributions. Here, self-employment income would be included in unearned income.

Second, a contrast might be drawn between the receipt of unearned income, which implies ownership of underlying physical and financial assets, and the case of wages and salaries where the only underlying 'asset' is the person themselves. For the same total income, unearned income recipients will generally be more asset-rich than earned income recipients, as they will generally have both their own ability to work as well as other assets. Thus, their scope for consumption spending will be correspondingly higher and their need of assistance will be less. There is a similar rationale behind the use of both income tests and asset tests to determine eligibility for social security payments in Australia.

Third, it might be argued that unearned income is somehow of a more 'morally dubious' character, compared to earned income. For example, we know that substantial portions of asset ownership are acquired not through saving out of the earned income of their present owners but through gifts and inheritances. It could be judged that income from assets acquired in the latter way are less deserving of tax relief than are other sorts of income. Recipients of such income have not actually expended work effort and abstained from consumption through saving in order to acquire the underlying assets.

Problems of an EITR

One problem of an EITR is that it would probably discourage work effort for certain categories of workers.(3) Such discouragement effects would be strongest in the 'phaseout range' for EITR benefits. This is the income range in which EITR benefits are gradually withdrawn to ensure that only truly deserving 'low earned income' recipients are assisted by the scheme. For example, the phaseout range of annual taxable income for Australia's Low Income Earner Rebate, as noted above, is $20,700 to $24,450.

Work effort in the phaseout range for an EITR will be doubly vulnerable to discouragement. Recipients will feel richer, because some of the EITR will still be paid and this will allow increased leisure to be enjoyed at the old level of disposable income, and the rewards to work at the margin will now be lower, because not only are normal tax rates payable but the EITR benefit itself is being gradually withdrawn. There may also be reduced work effort for those below the phaseout range.

However, an EITR would probably encourage persons presently outside the workforce to seek employment in jobs with wages low enough to qualify for EITR benefits, because the after-tax financial returns from such work will probably be greater.

Second, an EITR would entail higher tax rates on saving, over a certain income range, for eligible persons/ families. The EITR's eligibility test on unearned income would probably need to be reasonably strict, otherwise these tax benefits would begin to lose their 'earned' character by allowing increasing numbers of those with substantial assets into the scheme. However, this implies that, at the margin of eligibility, tax rates for such asset income would be higher than otherwise, again because both normal tax rates and EITR withdrawal are involved.

It is often argued that such higher tax rates on saving would discourage saving (i.e. acquiring assets) by people eligible for an EITR, and this would contribute both to macroeconomic problems of low national saving (e.g. current account deficits) and to 'poverty traps' where low income people do not have enough incentive to escape poverty through a combination of hard work and conscientious personal saving.(4)

However, it is widely believed that personal saving is not very sensitive to after-tax rates of return, so the magnitude of these anti-saving effects would probably be small.

Third, there may be problems of implementation. The receipt of EITR benefits might require eligible persons/families to participate in the tax assessment process through the submission of annual returns to the Australian Tax Office (ATO). Many low income earners do not currently submit annual returns. It might be necessary for the ATO to fill out annual returns, and to collect the relevant information and documents, on behalf of such people to ensure that they receive the EITR benefits. Alternatively, these people might receive equivalent payments through the social security system.

Implementation of an EITR will further strengthen incentives for taxpayers to under-report their asset income in order to qualify for the EITR benefits. Enhanced monitoring of such income flows, and greater use of the Tax File Number system for the auditing of personal taxpayers, will probably be necessary if substantial tax relief is to be offered through an EITR scheme.

Endnotes

  1. Scholz, John Karl. 'In Work Benefits in the United States: The Earned Income Tax Credit'. Economic Journal, vol. 106, January 1996: 156-169.

  2. The former might be regarded as 'earned' to the extent that they have been funded from superannuation contributions out of earned income. The latter could be included in the same income category in order to encourage these recipients to take up work. EITR benefits might also be exempt from social security income tests.

  3. Browning, Edgar. 'Effects of the Earned Income Tax Credit on Income and Welfare'. National Tax Journal, 48(1), March 1995: 23-43.

  4. It is important to note that the Government's Family Tax Initiative will also suffer from problems of discouraging work effort and personal saving, especially at the upper boundary of eligibility.
 

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