SPRC-National Social Policy Conference 2001
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Taxing women: the politics of gender in the tax/transfer system
Deborah Brennan and Bettina Cass
University of Sydney
Contact Email:   D.Brennan@econ.usyd.edu.au

The Australian literature on the politics of taxation is almost totally silent on the gender of taxpayers. This silence reflects a broader division in social science analysis between economic and social policy. While gender equity debates are central to the discussion of social policy (particularly the income transfer and welfare systems), taxation is often represented as operating within a distinct realm of economic policy in which gender considerations are extraneous. This paper explores the changes to family-based tax and transfer policies in the post-war period, with a particular emphasis on policy shifts introduced by the Coalition government since 1996. We argue that the shift to policies based on contrasting family types - families with a stay-at-home parent and families in which the sole or both parents participate in paid work – represents a substantial and regressive move away from the principles of equity which underpinned policy from the mid 1970s to the mid 1990s. We argue current arrangements are inimical to the fundamental principles of horizontal, vertical and gender equity.

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