Escaping from the Poverty Trap
There is a timely article on the existence of the poverty trap here in the Financial Times. The article draws on some of the recent research by the Centre for Social Justice which has looked at the disincentives facing people who want to earn extra income either by leaving the unemployment register or by taking a second job or working some extra hours. There are hundreds of thousands of people whose ’effective marginal tax rate‘ is well in excess of sixty per cent.
As this article in the Times makes clear “Marginal tax rates actually refer to the extra tax you pay in proportion to every extra pound you earn as your income rises.:
And for others, the net gains from earning higher gross incomes are even smaller.
The poverty trap comes about because for every £10 of higher incomes many lower-income families
1: A loss of income from tax and national insurance
2: The withdrawal of means-tested social security (welfare) benefits
Add in the financial costs of child care, traveling to and from work and the deterrent to finding a job or accepting some extra hours can be tough to overcome.
Disincentives matter hugely in the labour market and benefit reforms are likely to figure prominently in the manifesto of the Conservative Party at the next general election. It seems at the moment that they are taking a lead in developing a more radical approach to labour market reform. The Centre for Social Justice appears to be influential in reshaping their strategies to get people off benefits and into work.
One family in six in the UK has no one in work
There are now over 3 million households in the UK where no one of working age is in any form of work - the relentless rise of the ’workless household‘ is highlighted by new figures from the Office for National Statistics who have found that the number of working-age people in workless households jumped by 500,000 to 4.8 million in the year to June. 17% of households with people of working age have no one participating in the formal labour market. 2 million children belong to them and the risks of persistent and deep poverty are greatest for these groups. Little wonder that benefit dependency is rife for such families - the paradox is that those on the lowest incomes or whose main source of income are transfer payments, often face the highest effective marginal tax rates. Crucially the depth of non-employment is highest among lone-parent families - the workless household rate was highest for lone parent households, at 40.4 per cent,
Here is a regional snapshot of the problem - with the North East, Inner London and Northern Ireland suffering from the highest rates of economic inactivity among families with one or more people of working age
Revision - Labour Market Failure (presentation)
Here is a revised streamed presentation on market failure in the labour market
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