regardless of income and wealth. Th
us, these services are
provided universally free: they are the material equivalent
of monetary universal benefi ts.
It can also be argued that price stability
can assist in
the redistribution of income. In such circumstances, the
price level rises slowly and there is a steady rate of infl ation.
As shown in
Chapter 10
, this provides relatively stable
conditions for the macroeconomy. Th
e income stream from
taxation is secure, there is less pressure on government
spending and likely to be more resources available to reduce
income tax thresholds or the basic income tax rate. In a
modest way, income inequalities may be reduced.
As referred to earlier, means-tested benefi ts can result in
people on low incomes being trapped with little chance of
becoming better off . Universal benefi ts overcome this problem
but are invariably far too expensive to apply. One possible way
around this problem is
negative income tax
. Under such a
system, there would be a fl at rate of taxation (say 25%) and
SELF-ASSESSMENT TASK
8.4
Income disparity: the very uneven rise
in Pakistani incomes
The distribution of income in Pakistan continues to be
an important economic and political issue. Since 2000,
per capita income has increased rapidly but there is a
very disturbing fact – household income for the growing
urban middle class has continued to rise, yet the rural
poor have seen their real incomes fall. This is oft en the
case in emerging economies like that of Pakistan.
The widening disparity in incomes has got worse
since 2000. It has persisted when the economy was
expanding rapidly, when it has been slowing down
and when it has been almost stagnant. This is diff icult
to explain. Moreover, the implications for the poorest
people are worrying economists and the government;
for the poorest people the period of growth this
century has meant nothing. Yet the rest of the country’s
population has got richer, some stupendously so.
There have been wide geographical variations in
income growth since 2002. The fastest growth has
been in the Punjab and urban Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
regions where the incomes of the top 20% have risen
in real terms by an average of 3.8% per annum. In
contrast, the worst off have been in rural Sindh where
the real incomes of the bottom 20% have fallen
by 4.4% per annum. Interestingly, the very poor in
Balochistan experienced real income growth of 4% a
year, albeit from a very low base.
Over the past decade, the well-being of the
overwhelming majority of Pakistan’s population has
depended on how well the national economy has
been performing. This majority is not the middle
class, nor are they in the poorest class. These are the
ones whose votes will count at the next election.
Read the feature below and then answer the questions that follow.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: