One of the goals of income taxation is to -- gently or more forcefully, depending on your taste -- soften the inequalities generated by the market distribution of wellbeing. But does someone’s wellbeing depend on their family situation? For example, if someone is earning $20,000 per year and living alone, is that person better or worse off than someone with the same income living with a spouse earning $100,000? It seems likely that the ability to share food, housing, and other costs renders the person with a high-earning spouse better off. These family circumstances push toward the argument that the family is the right unit to measure wellbeing. Ignoring one’s family situation -- as strict individual taxation would do -- seems like we would be throwing away important information for assessing wellbeing.Of course, the problem with income splitting is that it doesn't "soften" the presumed advantage of the individual with a high-earning spouse at all. Instead, it rewards the individual with a high-earning spouse by allowing an election to apply a lower rate to the spouse's higher earnings - while the individual earning $20,000 on his or her own gets no opportunity to turn that low income into a tax advantage.
In effect, Milligan looks to be making a case to make a general practice of adding all household incomes, and applying income taxes to the total. Which may well be worth some further discussion - but suggests that income splitting to provide added benefits to families with a single high earner is utterly misguided.
No comments:
Post a Comment