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How Labour ended up taxing itself and why it matters: the long-term evolution of politics in German labour taxation

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Article
H

Kemmerling, Achim

Journal of European Social Policy

2014

24

2

May

150-163

fiscal policy ; government policy ; history ; taxation ; welfare state

Germany

Public finance and taxation

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0958928713517918

English

Bibliogr.

"This article argues that the long-term shift in the incidence of taxation from capital to labour has shifted the centre of political conflicts from representatives of capital to those of labour. The fact that most taxation has become an increasing and regressive burden on labour in mature welfare states creates new divides in tax policies among left politicians. To demonstrate this, the article applies the literature on new divides to the case of tax policy. A comparison of German tax policy debates in the late 19th and late 20th centuries reveals that major conflict lines were intra-class, and that over time these lines have shifted from capital to labour. The article concludes that as the origins of new divides are often endogenous to welfare-state politics, the literature on new divides greatly benefits from a historical ‘turn'."

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