Giving Credit where Due: A Path to Global Poverty ReductionUniversity Press of America, 2006 - 209 стор. According to the World Bank, approximately one billion people live on less than $1 a day. Giving Credit Where Due: A Path to Global Poverty Reduction critically examines the level and quality of the international community's response to such extreme poverty. This timely work traces the ethical and religious underpinnings of social welfare policy; describes income support systems in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere; and proposes a new strategy for reducing global poverty. Under this approach, developing countries would establish a refundable tax credit to put a floor under the incomes of their people who live on less than $1 a day. A global tax credit fund would be created by the United Nations and financed with contributions from rich nations and private donors. The fund would enable the UN to share in the costs with countries that adopt the tax credit approach. In an even-handed manner, Giving Credit Where Due addresses the inevitable objections to the approach, such as badly administered, even corrupt, revenue systems in many developing countries. It offers constructive ideas for making the refundable tax credit a reality in a changing global environment. This work will be of interest to aid agencies, such as the United Nations and the World Bank; social welfare policy analysts, economists, legislators, and journalists; and as a supplementary text for undergraduate and graduate courses. |
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... the failure of those two countries to attack poverty directly . It seems applicable to current conditions in the world as a whole . Introduction Extreme poverty in the world persists in part because viii Giving Credit Where Due.
... the failure of those two countries to attack poverty directly . It seems applicable to current conditions in the world as a whole . Introduction Extreme poverty in the world persists in part because viii Giving Credit Where Due.
Сторінка 17
... attack on global poverty would go well beyond making available a minimally adequate income . It would address the essential aspects of human and societal development . My goals in this book are more modest . For global poverty ...
... attack on global poverty would go well beyond making available a minimally adequate income . It would address the essential aspects of human and societal development . My goals in this book are more modest . For global poverty ...
Сторінка 92
... attack poverty on a global scale . 40 Tunisia's Ministry of Social Affairs also provides direct cash assistance to families needing income support . The program has significant flaws like high administrative costs , lack of updated ...
... attack poverty on a global scale . 40 Tunisia's Ministry of Social Affairs also provides direct cash assistance to families needing income support . The program has significant flaws like high administrative costs , lack of updated ...
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Giving Credit where Due: A Path to Global Poverty Reduction Robert Francis Clark Перегляд фрагмента - 2006 |
Загальні терміни та фрази
administrative Africa antipoverty approach Asian Development Bank basic income benefits Bolsa Escola consumption costs coun country's developing countries disability Earned Income Tax economic growth eligibility employment extreme poverty extremely poor families finance Fund global tax credit goal Gross Domestic Product groups guaranteed income guaranteed minimum income household human impact implementation incentive income support Income Tax Credit individual International Labour Organization International Monetary Fund investment labor force ment million minimum income national accounts negative income tax participating payments percent persons political population poverty line poverty reduction PPP$1 a day productivity recipients reduce reform refundable tax credit revenue robots rural sector social insurance social protection schemes social services social welfare society standard subsidies survey targeted tax credit program tax filers tax systems taxation technologies tion tional trade United Nations Development wages workers World Bank world's poorest