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by AnthonyMouse
2739 days ago
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Tax credits are cash. That's why they don't distort markets. If you give everyone extra money they can only use for education, education costs go up. If you give them extra money they can only use for housing, housing costs go up. Up compared to everything else -- like wages. Which is a problem. If you give them the money as cash, nothing is disproportionately affected because the money can be used for anything. There is no inherent reason it would even have to cause inflation, since general inflation is affected by multiple other independent factors, like interest rates, that can be set independently of any tax credits. The problems in France are caused by just the opposite -- they have many rules that collectively make it very risky and expensive to hire employees, resulting in employers who are wary to hire and a high unemployment rate. Which erodes the tax base, reducing the resources the government has for social programs while inducing demand for them from all of the unemployed people and lower income working people paying high ratios of taxes to benefits to compensate for those unable to find work, leading to widespread discontent and protests. They would do well to abandon the inefficient collage of price controls and subsidies in favor of direct cash transfer payments from the rich to the poor. |
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