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progressive tax |
Also found in: Legal, Financial, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
progressive taxTax levied at a rate that increases as the quantity subject to taxation increases. Designed to collect a greater proportion of tax revenue from wealthy people, progressive taxes reflect the view that those who are able to pay more should carry a heavier share of the tax burden. Progressive income taxes may provide for exemption from tax liability for incomes under a specified amount, or they may establish progressively greater rates for larger and larger incomes. The presence of deductions can also make a tax progressive. Progressive taxes are a stabilizing force in periods of inflation or recession because the amount of tax revenue changes more than proportionately with an increase or decrease in income. For example, in an inflationary economy, as prices and incomes rise, a greater percentage of taxpayers' income goes toward taxes. Government revenues increase, and the government has more leverage over the economy. A side effect of this system is that lower-income taxpayers have an especially difficult time making ends meet when inflation is high. To compensate, many economists advocate indexation; several countries adjust their tax rates annually in times of inflation, usually in line with the consumer price index. See also regressive tax. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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If the estate tax goes, progressive taxation follows, and social inequities continue to harden, then the danger of social unrest may not always seem as remote as it does today. This death tax effort has been a critical piece of an attack on the very idea of progressive taxation in America. Within the European community itself, nations with high rates of unionization, progressive taxation, and many mandated benefits--such as Sweden and Italy--also have had lower unemployment rates over the past decade than more free-wheeling Spain. |
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