The New Discrimination and Childcare
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Apps, Patricia
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Canberra, ACT: Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Abstract
The “new discrimination” refers to the use of government policy to increase the effective
gender wage gap, measured in terms of the second earner’s net of tax income gain from
working in the market place rather than at home. This paper presents an analysis of the
tax treatment of family members and shows how the expansion of policy instruments,
such as family tax benefits withdrawn on joint income and the low income tax offset, has
raised average and marginal rates on the income of the second earner, typically the
female partner. The study concludes that this new discrimination, together with limited
access to affordable, high quality childcare, has severely limited the growth of female
labour supply needed to fund family support, and is ultimately unsustainable in an ageing
population.
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Open Access
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