流行病、带薪病假和税收制度

IF 0.9 Q2 LAW
Alex M. R. Zhang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19大流行目前正在肆虐世界,美国在控制冠状病毒方面基本上没有成功。一个长期存在的政策失误突出地加剧了我国的大流行:缺乏带薪病假的国家授权,没有带薪病假,工人就会面临生病上班的经济和工作场所文化压力,从而将病毒传播给同事和广大公众。这篇文章提供了一个国家的蓝图,补贴带薪病假的任务和两个额外的见解,我们的税收机构作为实现更广泛的社会目标的机制。它首先以市场失灵(既有认知偏差,也有外部性)和工作场所平等为理由,为带薪病假规定辩护。报告还认为,有必要提供补贴,以保护低收入工人免受国家强制规定带来的失业风险。其次,本文批判性地评估了《家庭第一冠状病毒应对法》(FFCRA)中采用的现行联邦立法方法。然后,文章建议设计一种全国性的雇主强制带薪病假,由一般收入的商业税收抵免资助,并提供部分工资替代。本文对带薪病假的讨论产生了关于我们的税收制度的两个见解。首先,它质疑工资税的作用,工资税是高度累退的,几乎只给劳动者带来负担,当工资税资助的支出惠及更广泛的非工资收入公众时,工资税在规范上是不合理的。其次,本文揭示了税收制度在资金、可管理性和成本方面的可塑性。税收制度的这些比较优势使它们在危机时期永远受欢迎。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pandemics, Paid Sick Leaves, and Tax Institutions
The COVID-19 pandemic is currently ravaging the world, and the United States has been largely unsuccessful at containing the coronavirus. One long-standing policy failure stands out as having exacerbated the pandemic in our country: the lack of a national mandate of paid sick leaves, without which workers face financial and workplace-cultural pressures to attend work while sick, thus spreading the virus to their fellow employees and the public at large. This Article provides the blueprint for a national, subsidized mandate of paid sick leaves and two additional insights about our tax institutions as mechanisms of effectuating broader societal goals. It first justifies a paid-sick-leave mandate on the grounds of market failures (both cognitive biases and externalities) and workplace equality. It also argues for the need of subsidies in order to protect lower-income workers from unemployment risks imposed by a national mandate. Second, the Article critically assesses the current federal legislative approach utilized in the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA). The Article then proposes designing a national employer mandate of paid sick leaves funded by general-revenue business tax credits and providing partial wage replacement. This Article’s discussion of paid sick leaves yields two insights about our tax institutions. First, it questions the role of payroll taxes, which are highly regressive, impose burdens almost exclusively on labor, and are normatively unjustified when the spending funded by payroll taxes benefits the broader non-wage-earning public. Second, the Article reveals the malleability of tax institutions with respect to funding, administrability, and costs. These comparative advantages of tax institutions make them perennially popular in times of crisis.
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