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Martin Lopez-Daneri
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One econometric model predicts a NIT implies a 13% drop in the savings rate and a subsequent 22% reduction in the capital stock.
A NIT with marginal tax rate of 22% and a transfer of 11% of per-capita GDP implies a welfare gain equivalent to a 2.09% increase in annual consumption.
One econometric model predicts a NIT implies a 13% drop in the savings rate and a subsequent 22% reduction in the capital stock.
With a basic income, high-productivity workers increase participation while low-productivity workers reduce participation, increasing the Gini coefficient for labor earnings.
The optimal design of basic income (tax rates, transfer amounts) significantly depends on labor supply elasticity, where econometric models and real-world observations are in conflict.
sources
NIT Picking: The macroeconomic effects of a negative income tax
reports
Basic Income
tags
Policy Design Details
Implementation
Work Incentives
Employment
Stability
Productivity
Inequality
Savings
Growth
Negative Income Tax (NIT)
Welfare
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