Making Work Pay


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Making Work Pay Enough


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Making Work Pay


Book Description

Since its inception under President Ford in 1975, the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) has become the largest antipoverty program for the non-elderly in the United States. In 1998, more than nineteen million families received EITC payments, and the program lifted over four million Americans above the poverty line. Despite the rapid growth of the EITC throughout the 1990s, little has been written about how the program works or how it affects low-income families. Making Work Pay provides the first full-scale examination of the EITC, exploring its effects on income distribution, poverty, work, and marriage. Making Work Pay opens with a history of the EITC—its emergence in the 1970s as a pro-work, low-cost antipoverty program and its expansion through the 1980s and 1990s. The central chapters in the volume look at the substantial impact of the EITC on work incentives in recent years and show that the program, in combination with welfare reform and a strong economy, has led to an unprecedented increase in the employment of single mothers. In one study, researchers conclude that the EITC—with its stipulation that one family member be a wage earner—was the most important change in work incentives for single mothers between 1984 and 1996, a period when the employment rate of single mothers rose sharply. Several chapters outline proposals for reforming the program, addressing the concerns by policymakers about the work disincentives that rise as benefits fall with increasing income. Finally, Making Work Pay examines how EITC recipients view the credit and what they do with it once they get it. The contributors find that not only does EITC's lump-sum payment increase consumption but it also allows recipients to make changes in economic status. Many families use the end-of-the-year payment as a form of forced savings, enabling them to save for home improvement, a new car, or other purchases to improve their lives, and providing the extra economic cushion needed to move beyond mere day-to-day survival. Comprehensive in scope, Making Work Pay is an indispensable resource for policymakers, administrators, and researchers seeking to understand the ramifications of the country's largest programs for aiding the working poor.




Making Work Pay in Madagascar


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Poor people derive most of their income from work; however, there is insufficient understanding of the role of employment and earnings as a linkage between growth and poverty reduction, especially in low income countries. With the objective of providing inputs into the policy discussion on how to enhance poverty reduction through increased employment and earnings for given growth levels, this study explores this linkage in the case of Madagascar using data from the national accounts and household surveys from the years 1999, 2001, and 2005, a period characterized among others by a short but se.







Making Work Pay in Nicaragua


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Poor people derive most of their income from work; however, there is insufficient understanding of the role of labor markets, employment, and earnings as a linkage between growth and poverty reduction, especially in low income countries. To provide inputs into the policy discussion on how to enhance poverty reduction through increased employment and earnings for given growth levels, this study explores this linkage in the case of Nicaragua using data for 2001 and 2005. To do so, the study discusses macroeconomic growth and the labor market in Nicaragua, presenting sectoral employment and produ.




Democracy and Disagreement


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The din and deadlock of public life in America—where insults are traded, slogans proclaimed, and self-serving deals made and unmade—reveal the deep disagreement that pervades our democracy. The disagreement is not only political but also moral, as citizens and their representatives increasingly take extreme and intransigent positions. A better kind of public discussion is needed, and Amy Gutmann and Dennis Thompson provide an eloquent argument for “deliberative democracy” today. They develop a principled framework for opponents to come together on moral and political issues. Gutmann and Thompson show how a deliberative democracy can address some of our most difficult controversies—from abortion and affirmative action to health care and welfare—and can allow diverse groups separated by class, race, religion, and gender to reason together. Their work goes beyond that of most political theorists and social scientists by exploring both the principles for reasonable argument and their application to actual cases. Not only do the authors suggest how deliberative democracy can work, they also show why improving our collective capacity for moral argument is better than referring all disagreements to procedural politics or judicial institutions. Democracy and Disagreement presents a compelling approach to how we might resolve some of our most trying moral disagreements and live with those that will inevitably persist, on terms that all of us can respect.




"Making Work Pay" Debates from a Gender Perspective


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Recoge: 1. Introduction. - 2. The national focus of 'make work pay' debates en relation to social protection and social inclusion-an evaluation from a gender pespective. - 3. The impact of maternity and parental leave on employment. - 4. The impact of parental leave or extended absence for childcare ('returners') on eligibility for active labour market measures, lifelong learning or other training provisions. - 5. Conclusion.







Making Work Pay Wage Insurance for the Working Poor


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In this Public Policy Brief, Barry Bluestone and Teresa Ghilarducci argue for the need to establish "wage insurance" in the current environment of stagnating wages, increasing income instability, and rising adult poverty. The War on Poverty has succeeded in reducing the poverty rate for elderly Americans from 30 percent to 10.5 percent over the past three decades. Non-elderly adults constitute an absolute majority (50.2 percent) of all poor persons in the nation, up from 40.1 percent twenty-five years ago. With the overall growth in the number of persons in poverty in the United States from 25.4 million in 1970 to 38.1 million in 1994, the number of poor non-elderly adults nearly doubled, from 10.4 million to 19.1 million. Bluestone and Ghilarducci note that essential components of a wage insurance system already exist in the earned income tax credit (EITC) and the minimum wage. But the EITC and the federal wage floor must be seen as complements to one another, not substitutes for one another, in order to meet important criteria for any insurance program: high target efficiency and minimal adverse behavioral effects. Properly used, the EITC and the minimum wage fit together like finely cut jigsaw puzzle pieces; the considerable strengths of the EITC offset weaknesses in the minimum wage, while the minimum wage's greatest benefits offset some of the shortcomings of the EITC. The authors show that low income is being "democratized" as job instability increases. Due in part to corporate downsizing, an increasing number of once secure working-class and middle-class families are experiencing temporary or periodic poverty. Falling wages for at least the bottom 20 percent of the workforce and rising job and wage instability for much of the middle class portend a society in which work no longer serves as an effective guarantee against privation. Institutionalizing a form of wage insurance based on the EITC and a rising minimum wage can help protect a large segment of workers in this economic environment. The modest minimum wage increase to $5.15 recently passed by Congress will raise the income of over 12 million workers who now earn from $4.25 up to $5.15 per hour. Moreover, findings suggest that nearly 9 million workers currently earning between $5.15 and $6.14 per hour will see their wages rise by an average of 10 percent when the $5.15 wage floor goes into effect. This means that more than 21 million workers--one out of six in the workforce--will see their wages improve as a result of enacting the higher minimum wage. The EITC's greatest asset, from the perspective of battling poverty, is its target efficiency. More than 46 percent of the total tax credit goes to families who are living under the official poverty line, and more than two-thirds of the credit goes to families with income under $20,000. The EITC has still another advantage, one that is often overlooked by both its supporters and its detractors. It is a form of wage insurance for the temporary poor in a time of job instability and earnings insecurity. In any one year about one in six families is eligible for the tax credit, and over a period of a decade nearly 40 percent of families will have a year or more in which their wage income declines sufficiently for them to be eligible for the EITC. Neither the minimum wage nor the EITC is by itself an ideal solution to the wage poverty problem. Yet when the two are combined, the sum is greater than its parts. On three criteria (income adequacy, target efficiency, and labor supply employment effects), the minimum wage is weak. These are precisely the strengths of the EITC. On four other criteria (labor demand, productivity enhancement, fiscal impact, and limited moral hazard), the minimum wage is clearly the preferred program. What makes the two fit together so well is that the existence of a higher minimum wage actually reduces the negative productivity, fiscal impact, and moral hazard effects of the EITC, while the EITC makes up for the weak target efficiency and income adequacy of the minimum wage. Bluestone and Ghilarducci argue for a comprehensive and coherent strategy aimed at the working poor and those susceptible to highly fluctuating incomes. Changes in the food stamp program enacted as part of the recent welfare reform legislation and proposed cuts in the EITC work in precisely the opposite direction. A cut of $23 billion in food stamp benefits between 1997 and 2002 and the increased FICA tax liability accompanying the increase in the federal minimum wage reduce the effective hike in the wage floor from $0.90 to $0.73 per hour for non-immigrants. For legal immigrants working full-time, who will now be denied food stamps, the lost benefit is more than double the earnings gain attributable to the increase in the minimum wage. In addition, the congressional resolution for balancing the federal budget by 2002 includes an $18.5 billion reduction in EITC benefits. These changes undermine the objective of assuring that families that work will not be mired in poverty and dependency. Wage insurance becomes more necessary in a political climate of welfare overhauling and budget cutting that gives with one hand while taking with the other. Efforts to improve education and training programs, expand community development efforts, promote unionization, and narrow the gender pay gap can reduce the long-run cost of wage insurance.