Health and Welfare Policy Forum

Assessing the Size and Redistributive Effects of Welfare States: Evidence from Net Social Expenditure and Net Tax Effect in OECD Social Spending

  • Author

    Choi, Hyejin

  • Page

    71-88

  • PubDate

    2025. 10.

  • Language

    kor

Premised on the recognition that it is difficult by indicators of public social and total social expenditures alone to arrive at a precise measure of the size of a welfare state, this study in its analysis of 2001-2021 OECD SOCX data incorporates net social expenditure, the net tax effect, and private social expenditures. The net tax effect is defined as the difference between the amount clawed back through the taxation of welfare benefits and the value of tax breaks for social purposes (TBSPs) comparable to cash benefits. The analysis yielded several findings. First, Denmark, Finland, France, and Germany exhibited a large net tax effect (6-7 percent), indicating a “high expenditure, high claw-back” type, while Australia and the United States displayed a pattern of “high reliance on taxation and private spending.” During the period, Korea’s gross social expenditure as a share of GDP was either roughly equal to its net social expenditure in some years―for example, 18.8 percent and 18.7 percent in 2021―or even lower in others, when the net tax effect turned negative. Second, in many countries since the 2010s, variations in the net tax effect―the difference between gross and net social expenditures―have increasingly been driven by the claw-back factor. Germany and France saw their net tax effect increase over time due to stronger claw-back measures and reduced TBSPs, while in Korea, the US, and the UK, the net tax effect remained low, with an embedded mixture of claw-back measures and TBSPs. Third, the analysis found that the larger the net tax effect as a percentage of GDP, the more significant was the decrease in in the Gini coefficient. Our decomposition of the net tax effect attributes much of the distributive improvement to claw-back taxation and little of it to TBSPs. At times such as now when welfare benefits are becoming increasingly universal, Korea stands in need of revamping taxation and claw-back regulations on welfare benefits and restructuring the management of its continuously growing TBSPs.

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공공누리 공공저작물 자유 이용허락, 출처표시, 상업적 이용 금지, 변경금지
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