"Social
Expenditures" In the US Are Higher Than All Other OECD Countries, Except
France
According to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD), "social
expenditures" are expenditures that occur with the purpose of
redistributing resources from one group to another, in order to benefit a
lower-income or presumably disadvantaged population.
Social Security in the US is one example, and would be considered a
"public expenditure" because it involves direct spending by a
government agency.
However, governmental bodies in the US and elsewhere also employ a wide array of mandates and
tax-based benefits and incentives to carry out social policy. This
distinguishes the US in particular from most European countries that rely more
on cash benefits or non-cash benefits administered directly by governments.
But governments are not limited to direct
benefits. Governments
may also employ "tax breaks for social purposes" (TBSPs) including
tax credits for child care, and tax breaks for health-care related
spending.
Furthermore, in the United States — more so
than in other countries — governments create tax incentives and mandates that
lead to high levels of "private social expenditure." The OECD defines these private expenditures as
expenditures that are designed to redistribute wealth, but are not administered
directly by government agencies:
Mandatory private
social expenditure: social support stipulated by legislation but
operated through the private sector , e. g. direct sickness payments by
employers to their absent employees as legislated by public authorities, or benefits
accruing from mandatory contributions to private insurance funds.
Voluntary private
social expenditure: benefits accruing from privately operated
programmes that involve the redistribution of resources across households and
include benefits provided by NGOs, and benefit accruing from tax advantaged
individual plans and collective (often employment - related ) support
arrangements , such as for example, pensions, childcare support, and, in the
US, employment - related health plans
The focus on direct government spending, however, creates the impression
that the US does not engage in the business of redistributing wealth to the
degree of other OECD-type countries. But this is not the case. When we consider
tax incentives, benefits, and mandates, the picture is very different.
When just measuring direct government spending as a
percentage of GDP, the US ranks fairly low. Note however, that even in this case,
the US ranks above both Australia and Canada, two countries that are rarely
accused of being excessively capitalist:
Direct social spending by government constitutes
18.6 percent of GDP in the US. In Australia, the total is 16.9 percent, and in Canada,
it is 16.3 percent. France tops the list with 29.4 percent.
But this just captures spending by government
entities. When we look at other types of spending that result from tax
incentives and mandates, things look different.
Once tax breaks for social purposes (TBSPs) are included, the US begins to
look much more similar to its European counterparts. By this measure, the US
falls in the middle, with more net social spending (as a percentage of GDP)
than New Zealand, Norway, Luxembourg, Australia, and Canada:
By this measure, social spending constitutes 20.1 percent in the US,
compared to 17.4 percent in Australia and 15.3 percent in Canada. Luxembourg is
18.0 percent and Norway is 18.1 percent. France, again, tops the list with 27.9
percent.
These tax breaks have the effect of encouraging "private" social
expenditures as well, including health care spending (for example).
Once these "private" sources of social spending are included, we find
that the US spends the most by far. We should note also that these figures,
from 2011, predate the enactment of "Obamacare," and do not reflect
what will likely entail far greater amounts of private social social
expenditure on health care.
In this measure, private social spending comes in at 10.1 percent which is
almost twice as much as the next big private spender, the Netherlands, at 5.2
percent. The United Kingdom comes in third at 4.8 percent:
So, once we take this into account, we get what
the OECD calls "net total social expenditure." It is, of course, deceptive to ignore
social expenditures that take a form other than cash transfers and transactions
with government agencies. After all, numerous countries other than the US
employ legislation (including tax law) to incentivize or mandate social
spending with the specific purpose of providing benefits or advantages to
certain households.
In the US, net total social expenditures amount
to 28.7 percent of GDP. Only France shows a higher rate than this with 31.2 percent. Belgium comes
in third at 27.4 percent.
Conclusions
There are a few things we can learn from this analysis. First of all, it is
important to note that the US does not
redistribute resources any less than other countries. Like most other
"developed" countries, the US employs a wide variety of public
policies to benefit certain groups and income levels.
Additionally, when taken together, the expenditures that result from these
public policies are sizable, and even exceed nearly all other countries
measured.
Left-wing pundits and scholars who wish to portray the US as a kind
of hyper-capitalist social-Darwinist system conveniently focus on direct cash
transfers and social spending by government agencies while ignoring other
sources of social expenditures. At the same time, conservatives and right wing pundits, for different reasons, often
attempt to portray the US government as a regime that engages in less
redistribution of wealth than other states. Both groups are mistaken.
Whether or not the policies employed in the US have had the effect
preferred by advocates of more social spending is a separate matter from the
amount spent overall. We cannot
honestly say that the US is some sort of outlier when the US clearly engages in
social expenditures in proportions that rival multiple states in Western and
Northern Europe.
Nor should we ignore the fact that the the redistributive policies employed
by the US lead to just as many distortions to the economy as does the direct
social spending favored by European governments. Tax breaks for homeowners, for
example, create incentives for buying homes which distorts real estate markets
while increasing the relative tax burden on renters. Tax incentives that
encourage more spending on health care drive up health care prices. And so on.
And of course, the US employs a wide
variety of direct spending and subsidy schemes that create distortions of their
own, including Social Security, Medicaid, "Section 8," and others.
Ultimately, we are forced to conclude that redistributive social spending
in the US is indeed different
from many other countries. But the overall
magnitude is actually greater
(both proportionally and in absolute terms) in the US than in almost all other
countries measured. One can argue that the way that the wealth is redistributed through public policy in
the US is "wrong" or "suboptimal." But, to argue that there is less
redistribution as a result of public policy in the US than elsewhere is simply
wrong.
Source: zerohedge.com
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