Despite costing hundreds of billions of dollars and subsidizing everything from homeownership and child care to health insurance, tax expenditures (commonly known as tax loopholes) have received little attention from those who study American government. This oversight has contributed to an incomplete and misleading portrait of U.S. social policy. Here Christopher Howard analyzes the "hidden" welfare state created by such programs as tax deductions for home mortgage interest and employer-provided retirement pensions, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and the Targeted Jobs Tax Credit. Basing his work on the histories of these four tax expenditures, Howard highlights the distinctive characteristics of all such policies. Tax expenditures are created more routinely and quietly than traditional social programs, for instance, and over time generate unusual coalitions of support. They expand and contract without deliberate changes to individual programs. Howard helps the reader to appreciate the historic links between the hidden welfare state and U.S. tax policy, which accentuate the importance of Congress and political parties. He also focuses on the reasons why individuals, businesses, and public officials support tax expenditures. The Hidden Welfare State will appeal to anyone interested in the origins, development, and structure of the American welfare state. Students of public finance will gain new insights into the politics of taxation. And as policymakers increasingly promote tax expenditures to address social problems, the book offers some sobering lessons about how such programs work.
Students of public finance will gain new insights into the politics of taxation. And as policymakers increasingly promote tax expenditures to address social problems, the book offers some sobering lessons about how such programs work.
... 77–78 United Mine Workers (UMW), 169,171 Verba, Sidney, 198, 200 Veterans Administration (VA), 19–20 Waxman, Henry, 102–4 Weiker, Lowell, 83 Welfare, 2, 2n, 5, 27–30, 31, 54, 57–58, 106; and public opinion, 46–47, 118.
In The Other Side of the Coin, political scientists Christopher Ellis and Christopher Faricy examine public opinion towards social tax expenditures—the other side of the American social welfare state—and their potential to expand ...
Worldwide shadow education: Outside-school learning, institutional quality of schooling, and cross-national mathematics achievement. Educational Evaluation and Policy ... In Shadow education as worldwide curriculum studies (pp. 25–60).
Kaus , Mickey . “ The Work - Ethic State . ” New Republic ( July 7 , 1986 ) . Kirlin , John and Dale Marshall . “ The New Politics of Entrepreneurship . ” In Lawrence Lynn , Jr. ( Chair ) , Urban Change and Poverty . Washington , D.C .
The Battle Over Public and Private Social Benefits in the United States Jacob S. Hacker ... Rein and Lee Rainwater , such as their edited collection Public - Private Interplay in Social Protection : A Comparative Study ( Armonk , N.Y .
Mettler analyzes three Obama reforms—student aid, tax relief, and health care—to reveal the submerged state and its consequences, demonstrating how structurally difficult it is to enact policy reforms and even to obtain public ...
In this book, José Antonio Ocampo and Joseph E. Stiglitz bring together distinguished contributors to examine the global variations of social programs and make the case for a redesigned twenty-first-century welfare state.
This volume offers a critical examination of efforts to change the welfare state to a workfare state by looking at on-the-ground issues in six countries: the US, UK, Australia, Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands.
Oscar Ross Ewing, interview, SocialSecurity AdministrationProject, pt.3,no. 155, taperecorded 26August 1966 (New York: Columbia UniversityOral HistoryCollection, 1976), 75– 77, quotation on 77. 73. Theodore R. Marmor, The Politicsof ...