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The Impact of Tax-Benefit Systems on Low-Income Households in the Benelux Countries

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Immervoll, H., Berger, F., Borsenberger, M., Lumen, J., Scholtus, B., De Vos, K. The Impact of Tax-Benefit Systems on Low-Income Households in the Benelux Countries. . A Simulation Approach Using Synthetic Datasets. Journal of Contextual Economics – Schmollers Jahrbuch, 121(3), 313-351. https://doi.org/10.3790/schm.121.3.313
Immervoll, Herwig; Berger, Frédéric; Borsenberger, Monique; Lumen, Julie; Scholtus, Bertrand and De Vos, Klaas "The Impact of Tax-Benefit Systems on Low-Income Households in the Benelux Countries. A Simulation Approach Using Synthetic Datasets. " Journal of Contextual Economics – Schmollers Jahrbuch 121.3, 2001, 313-351. https://doi.org/10.3790/schm.121.3.313
Immervoll, Herwig/Berger, Frédéric/Borsenberger, Monique/Lumen, Julie/Scholtus, Bertrand/De Vos, Klaas (2001): The Impact of Tax-Benefit Systems on Low-Income Households in the Benelux Countries, in: Journal of Contextual Economics – Schmollers Jahrbuch, vol. 121, iss. 3, 313-351, [online] https://doi.org/10.3790/schm.121.3.313

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The Impact of Tax-Benefit Systems on Low-Income Households in the Benelux Countries

A Simulation Approach Using Synthetic Datasets

Immervoll, Herwig | Berger, Frédéric | Borsenberger, Monique | Lumen, Julie | Scholtus, Bertrand | De Vos, Klaas

Journal of Contextual Economics – Schmollers Jahrbuch, Vol. 121 (2001), Iss. 3 : pp. 313–351

1 Citations (CrossRef)

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Article Details

Immervoll, Herwig

Berger, Frédéric

Borsenberger, Monique

Lumen, Julie

Scholtus, Bertrand

De Vos, Klaas

Cited By

  1. Marginal effective tax rates on employees on czech and slovak labour market in the period of transformation

    Pavel, Jan

    Vítek, Leoš

    Politická ekonomie, Vol. 53 (2005), Iss. 4 P.477

    https://doi.org/10.18267/j.polek.518 [Citations: 5]

Abstract

Computing the tax-benefit position of similar "typical" households across countries is a method widely used in comparative fiscal- and social policy research. These calculations provide convenient summary pictures of certain aspects of tax-benefit systems. They can, however, be seriously misleading because they reduce very complex systems to single point estimates. Using an integrated European tax-benefit model (EUROMOD), we substitute the typical household by a synthetic dataset, which can be used across countries. By varying certain important household characteristics (notably income), this dataset captures a much larger range of household situations. The calculations performed on this range of households not only show the tax-benefit position of many individual households but also demonstrate which household characteristics determine taxes and benefits in each country. Hypothetical calculations such as those presented here do not exploit the ability of EUROMOD to determine the impact of policies on actual populations. Nevertheless, they can be a valuable contribution to understanding tax-benefit systems since they allow us to separate the effects of tax-benefit rules from those of the population structure.