Taxing reproduction: the full transfer cost of rearing children in Europe

Author:

Vanhuysse Pieter1ORCID,Medgyesi Márton2ORCID,Gál Róbert Iván34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Full Professor of Politics and Public Policy, Department of Political Science and Public Management; Senior Fellow of Business and Social Sciences, Danish Institute for Advanced Study; Member of the European Academy, University of Southern Denmark, Campusvej 55, 5230 Odense M, Denmark

2. Senior Researcher, TARKI Social Research Institute; Senior Researcher, Child Opportunities Research Group, HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences; Senior Researcher, Corvinus Institute for Advanced Studies, Corvinus University, Budapest, Hungary

3. Head of Research Centre, Corvinus Institute for Advanced Studies; Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Corvinus University, Budapest, Hungary

4. Senior Researcher, Hungarian Demographic Research Institute; Visiting Professor, Institute of Economics, Hitotsubashi University, Kunitachi, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

What are the intergenerational resource transfer contributions of parents and non-parents in Europe? Using National Transfer Accounts and National Time Transfer Accounts for 12 countries around 2010, we go beyond public transfers (net taxes) to also value two statistically much less visible transfers in the family realm: of market goods and of unpaid household labour (time). Non-parents contribute almost exclusively to public transfers. But parents additionally provide still larger private transfers: mothers mainly time, fathers mainly market goods. Estimating transfer stocks over the working life, the average parental/non-parental contribution ratio in Europe flips from 0.73 (public transfers alone) to 2.66 (all three transfers combined). The highest combined parental/non-parental contribution ratios are in Sweden and Finland. The metaphorical tax rates implicitly imposed thereby on rearing children in Europe are multiples of the value-added tax rates in place on consumption goods. Unveiling the sheer magnitude of these invisible transfer asymmetries carries multiple implications for policy debates. For instance, it raises the question whether ageing European societies unwittingly tax, rather than subsidise, their own reproduction. Family friendly policy models, such as the Nordic welfare states, do not mitigate this effect. They help parents work, but do not lower the implicit tax parents pay.

Funder

Seventh Framework Programme of the European Union

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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