Title: Figure 7.1 A Price Distorting Subsidy
1Chapter 7
Government Subsidies and Income Support for the
Poor
2 Poverty in 2001
- 33 million people in U.S. affected
- 12 of the population classified as poor
3Poverty in the United StatesPoverty threshold or
poverty line in 2001
4Poverty line
- Poverty Line originally created by the Social
Security Administration as three times the cost
of a nutritionally adequate diet - Updated annually for inflation using the CPI
5Poverty Rate 1960-2001
6Why We Have Government Programs to Aid the Poor
- Concern about equity-efficiency trade-offs.
- Creates the positive externality of social
stability.
7Entitlement Programs Government programs that
guarantee recipients benefits as long as they
meet eligibility tests
- Means Tests typically income and wealth criteria
that must be met for an individual or family to
be eligible for a program - Status Tests typically disability, children, and
age criteria that must be met for an individual
or family to be eligible for a program.
8Cash Programs
- TANF Temporary Aid to Needy Families
- Program most identified with a welfare check may
provide for child-care expenses or job retraining - SSI Supplemental Security Income
- Program provides cash payments to the widowed,
orphaned and disabled. - EITC Earned Income Tax Credit
- A program that increases the take-home pay of the
working poor by as much as 4140 in 2002 for a
family with two children.
9In-Kind Programs
- Food Stamps vouchers that enable a broad class
of poor people to purchase a wide variety of food
products - WIC vouchers enable poor, pregnant, and
post-natal women to purchase a narrow variety of
food products. - Medicaid federal and state funded program that
provides health care services to the poor - The Childrens Health Insurance Program
federal program that subsidizes health insurance
coverage for the working poor.
10Major Federal Government Expenditures To Aid the
Poor, 2003
11Price Distorting Subsidies
-
- Price Distorting Subsidies lower the price of a
particular (subsidized) good relative to other
goods for eligible people.
12Figure 7.1 A Price Distorting Subsidy
13Dead Weight Loss or Excess Burden
- Dead Weight Loss (sometimes called Excess Burden
) measures the extra benefit a recipient can
enjoy from the dollar amount of the
price-distorting subsidy if instead the grant
was received in a lump sum.
14Figure 7.2 Excess Burden of a Subsidy
15Figure 7.3 Full Subsidization of Medical Services
B
16Additional Effects of Subsidies The Case of
Increasing Costs
- Taxpayers face a double burden not only must
they pay Medicaid costs through taxes,the program
also increases the amount non-eligible patients
pay for medical services by increasing demand for
those services.
17Figure 7.4 The Impact of The Medicaid Program on
Price The Case of Increasing Cost
QG
18Subsidizing Food
- Food Stamps subsidies that allow recipients
particular allotments of vouchers to buy food,
but recipients may supplement the subsidy with
their own cash. It is illegal to sell food
stamps, though it may be in the recipients
interests to do so.
19Figure 7.7 The Impact of an In-Kind Transfer
Food Stamps
20The Impact of Government Assistance Programs on
Work
- Transfers could cause people to work more or
less, depending on whether leisure is a normal
good.
21Figure 7.8 The Income Effect of a Transfer
B
22Figure 7.9 A Transfer that Declines with Earned
Income e.g. T300-.7IE
23Empirical Evidence
- A 10 increase in welfare payments to individuals
decreases work effort by 2.
24Negative Income Tax
- The Negative Income Tax is a system with no
status test, but there is an income guarantee and
a take-back rate. - T IG tNIE
- Where
- IG Income guarantee
- tN take back rate
- IE earned income
- T Transfer
25Break-Even Income
26Negative Income Tax
Earned Income IE Transfer T IG tNIE Disposable Income ID
0 5,000 5,000
1,000 5,000 (.5 1000) 4,500 5,500
2,000 5,000 (.5 2000) 4,000 6,000
3,000 5,000 (.5 3000) 3,500 6,500
4,000 5,000 (.5 4000) 3,000 7,000
5,000 5,000 (.5 5000) 2,500 7,500
6,000 5,000 (.5 6000) 2,000 8,000
7,000 5,000 (.5 7000) 1,500 8,500
8,000 5,000 (.5 8000) 1,000 9,000
9,000 5,000 (.5 9000) 500 9,500
10,000 5,000 (.5 10000) 0 10,000
27EITC
- The Earned Income Tax Credit goes to the working
poor and varies with the number of children.
Typically, recipients receive the assistance with
their tax refund, but papers can be filed to
receive the money in their paychecks throughout
the year.
28EITC (2002 two-child family)
Total Earned Income EITC
0 0
2,000 810
4,000 1,610
6,000 2,410
8,000 3,210
10,000 4,140
15,000 3,823
20,000 2,770
33,200 0
29Figure 7.11 Earned Income Tax Credit in 1999, By
Number of Children and Earnings
30Welfare Reform of 1996
- Time Limits
- 5-year lifetime limit
- 2-years at a time
- If states meet certain goals, they can waive this
rule for up to 20 of their caseloads. - Work and Training
- Half a states TANF recipients must be in work
programs - subsidized child care
- Teen Mothers
- no longer eligible to receive their own payments
- must live with responsible adult.
- Refusal to work
- If recipients have children over five and the
parents refuse to work, families can be denied
aid and children may be placed in foster care.
31Impact of Welfare Reform
- Welfare caseloads have declined.
- Labor force participation among less-skilled
single mothers has increased more than expected. - State governments have greatly increased their
spending for work support programs, including - child care subsidies,
- transportation subsidies,
- help with job search expenses,
- subsidized wages.
32Percent Share of Income by Quintile
Year LowestFifth Second Fifth Third Fifth Fourth Fifth Highest Fifth
1947 5.0 11.9 17.0 23.1 43.0
1967 4.0 11.1 17.6 24.6 42.7
1976 4.3 10.4 17.0 24.7 43.6
1987 3.8 9.6 16.1 23.3 46.7
1997 3.6 8.9 15.0 22.2 49.4
2001 3.5 8.7 14.6 23.0 50.1