Dr. Shahram Yazdani Wealth Redistribution Policies Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences School of Medical Education Strategic Policy Sessions:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 2 Economic Systems.
Advertisements

The Political Economy.
Chapter Three Population and Culture
Three Basic Questions What to produce (includes how much)
Capitalism vs. Socialism Created by: Tammy Twiggs.
Chapter 4 Global Analysis
Economic Institutions
In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
Economic Growth and the Wealth of Nations Chapter 16
Dr Maurice Mullard Lecture 5.  World Bank and UN argument that global is good for the poor  World Bank yardstick of $1 a day to measure poverty – see.
Dr. Shahram Yazdani Health Equity Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences School of Medical Education Strategic Policy Sessions: 02.
Economic Systems.
Economic Systems Different Approaches to Economics in Comparative Government & Politics.
Transition from Command to Free Enterprise. Transitional Economy  Is an economy which is changing from a centrally planned economy (Command) to a free.
Economic Systems.
The role of government in the United States economy How does the United States government promote and regulate competition?
Starter: Get out the reading on Types of Economic Activities from yesterday.
Economic Systems SSEF4 The student will compare and contrast different economic systems and explain how they answer the three basic economic questions.
Chapter 30 Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt Chapter 30 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Public Finance Public finance is the field of economics that studies government activities and the alternative means of financing government expenditures.
1 Public Finance Public finance is the field of economics that studies government activities and the alternative means of financing government expenditures.
Poverty & Human Capability 101 Introductory Class.
Chapter 4 Economic Systems and Development. © Prentice Hall, 2008International Business 4e Chapter Discuss the decline of centrally planned economic.
The Wealth of Nations Predicting Economic Growth.
The Future of the Global Economy Augusto López-Claros, Ph.D. International Environment Forum Brighton, United Kingdom December 18, 2010.
Converging Economic Systems. Comparing Capitalism and Socialism.
Chapter 24, Lesson 2.  In a market economy, individuals make the economic decisions.  Private individuals, not the government, own the factors of production.
The Role of Government in the United States Economy How does the United States government promote and regulate competition?
Political Economy.
Political Economy Political Economy = balance between political and market forces What balance between states and markets most enhances capabilities? Balance.
ECONOMICS. ECONOMIC SYSTEMS  METHOD USED BY A SOCIETY TO PRODUCE AND DISTRIBUTE GOODS AND SERVICES.
SUPER NOTES CHs LOOK for the $-MONEY QUESTIONS.
Chapter 14 Taxes and Government Spending Taxes Tax – Financial charges imposed on individuals and businesses by a government Purposes of taxes To provide.
E VERYONE ’ S FAVORITE …….. TAXES !!!. T HE R OLE OF G OVERNMENT Two typical microeconomic roles of government in a market economy are: provision of public.
Activities, Systems, and Measure of Wealth
Economic Systems and Development. © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter Chapter Preview Discuss the decline of centrally planned.
Chapter 2 The Economy: Myth and Reality E pluribus unum (Out of many, one) MOTTO ON U.S. CURRENCY.
1 Overview of Comparative Economics Chapter I How do we compare economies?
Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 5-1 International Linkages United States and World Trade Specialization and Comparative Advantage The Foreign.
Public Policy Economic performance Social welfare Population/Migration The environment Civil liberties, rights, and freedoms.
Why Are Some Nations Wealthy?
International Comparison of Health Care Gene Chang.
GOVERNMENT ECONOMIC SYSTEMS. WHAT IS ECONOMICS? The study of how goods and services are produced, distributed, and consumed. The people who make goods.
??What you should know?? 1.Name a type of government that usually uses a command system of economics? 2. Who owns and operates most business in a command.
Public Policy. Domestic – Programs seek to improve the economy, social, and political conditions within a country Foreign – Policies concern other nations,
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Around the World
The United States The Economy. What is GDP ? Gross Domestic Product (GDP): The total market (or dollar) value of all final goods and services produced.
Economics is the science that deals with the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services, or the material welfare of humankind. There.
The study of how people, businesses, and societies choose to use scarce resources to satisfy their unlimited wants.
Economies. Economy is... The production, distribution, trade and consumption of GOODS and SERVICES.
Comparing Economic Systems Chapter 26. International Trade Section 1.
Economic Systems. I. ?s - All Economic Systems Answer What and how many goods and services should be produced? How should goods and services be produced?
Economic Systems Chapter 17. Main Idea Economies vary when it comes to government involvement. The relationship between government and the economy has.
Political Economics Riccardo Puglisi Lecture 4 Content: Welfare State: Facts, Data and Relevant Issues Economic Policies Size and Composition of the Welfare.
THE AFFECTS OF ECONOMIC ISSUES AND GOVERNMENT ON BUSINESS Bus101.
WHAT ROLE DOES THE GOVERNMENT PLAY???. WHAT DOES THE GOVERNMENT PROVIDE FOR IN A MARKET ECONOMY? The government provides goods and services such as military.
Economics. What is Economics? Economics is the study of the production, distribution, and use of goods and services. There are 3 basic questions that.
* * Chapter Two Understanding How Economics Affects Business Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
1 The Creation and Distribution of Wealth Economics Chapter 2.
Economics Review. Warm-Up What goods and services should be produced? How should goods and services be produced? Who consumes the goods and services?
Economics Review.
Adam Smith and the “invisible hand” markets in a modern economy
Economics The study of how people, businesses, and societies choose to use scarce resources to satisfy their unlimited wants 1.
Understanding How Economics Affects Business
GDP (Nominal, in trillions) 2017 World Bank
Understanding How Economics Affects Business
5 The United States and the Global Economy.
5 The United States and the Global Economy.
Chapter 4 Economic Systems and Development
Presentation transcript:

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Wealth Redistribution Policies Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences School of Medical Education Strategic Policy Sessions: 05

Dr. Shahram Yazdani “It’s Your money, not the government’s” Ronald Reagan

Dr. Shahram Yazdani “As long as there existed a business owning, class oppression would continue. Private property is illegal. Karl Marx

Dr. Shahram Yazdani What is an Ideology? Generally speaking, it is a value system through which we perceive, explain and accept the world. According to the political theorist Robert Dahl, all individuals are ideologues in the sense that we all map out our own interpretations of what the world is and how it should be.

Dr. Shahram Yazdani The Major Components of Ideologies The state of human nature The role of the individual in society The role of the state The sources and limits of political authority The preferred economic and social order

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Ideologies: The Preferred Economic and Social Order Ideologies have to deal with the fundamental question of who controls the wealth in society. Should wealth be equally shared, or should some individuals be allowed to possess more wealth than others? For communists, private ownership is not allowed. They are committed to providing an equitable distribution of wealth For capitalists, people need to compete with one another in order to have an incentive for material gain. Economic and social inequities are allowed to exist

Dr. Shahram Yazdani “The Economy” How politics and economics interact, and how they balance conflicting values of freedom and equality

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Components of Political Economy Markets – interaction between supply and demand that functions to allocate resources  Freely allow individuals to buy, sell, and trade what they produce for what they will consume  Sets values, or “prices” for these goods and services  Markets arise spontaneously, and are difficult for the state to control

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Components of Political Economy Property – ownership of goods and services  State can choose to play a role in protecting property rights – the right to sell property freely, or to not have it taken away In LDCs, frequently property exists without a fundamental protection of property rights, due to the state’s inability to monitor instances of fraud

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Components of Political Economy Public Goods – goods provided and/or secured by the state  Examples (universal): Roads, lighthouses, the military  Examples (in some cases) Health care in Britain, Canada Oil in Nigeria and Saudi Arabia Most businesses in Cuba

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Components of Political Economy Taxation  Means to provide for public goods and social expenditures  Subject of political battles, determined partially by ideology toward the role of the state

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Components of Political Economy Social Expenditures  Commonly called “The Welfare State” – redistribution of wealth through government taxing some, and paying others  Typically provided to the elderly, the unemployed, the poor, and the disabled  Often a subject of political battle, due to the question of who benefits from expenditures

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Components of Political Economy Money, Inflation, and Unemployment  States create and manage the money supply through a central bank  Creation of too much money in effort to stimulate the economy and reduce unemployment can cause inflation  Slowing the growth of money to control inflation can slow economic growth and cause unemployment to rise

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Components of Political Economy Regulation – rules or orders to set the boundaries of given procedures  States can ban production or sale of goods, set safety requirements, outlaw monopoly control, etc. Trade – access to goods and services from foreign states  States can allow open trade, or restrict it through tariffs, quotas, and other non-tariff barriers

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Tax Rates as % of GDP (2008) Sweden: 54.2 % Denmark: 48.8 % Finland: 46.9 % Belgium: 45.6 % France: 45.3 % Austria: 43.7 % Italy: 42 % Netherlands: 41.4 % Norway: 40.3 % Germany: 37.9 % United Kingdom: 37.4 % Russia: 36.9 % Canada: 35.8 % Switzerland: 35.7 % New Zealand: 35.1 % Australia: 31.5 % Ireland: 31.1 % United States: 29.6 % Japan: 27.1 % China: 17% Mexico: 9.7% Iran: 7.3% Nigeria: 6.1%

Dr. Shahram Yazdani GDP for the 6 Countries U.S. - $14.26 Trillion China - $4.4 Trillion United Kingdom - $2.67 Trillion Russia - $1.68 Trillion Mexico - $1.09 Trillion Iran - $0.34 Trillion Nigeria - $0.21 Trillion

Dr. Shahram Yazdani GDP per capita (PPP) for the 6 Countries U.S. - $46,859 China - $5,693 United Kingdom - $36,523 Russia - $15,922 Mexico - $14,560 Iran - $11,250 Nigeria - $2,134

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Gini Coefficient for the 6 Countries Sweden – 23.1 Germany – 28.3 U.S. – 40.8 China – 44.7 United Kingdom – 36.0 Russia – 31.0 Mexico – 54.6 Iran – 43.0 Nigeria – 50.6

Dr. Shahram Yazdani HDI Ranking for the 6 Countries U.S. – #8 China – #94 United Kingdom – #12 Russia – #57 Mexico – #53 Iran – #101 Nigeria – #151

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Priori + Experience=Posteriori Success is one percent inspiration and ninety- nine percent perspiration Where I was born Who are my parents Inspiration Perspiration How I was developed What is my IQ Who am I now What have I now + =

Dr. Shahram Yazdani Wealth Redistribution Revenue Model  Logarithmic (Regressive)  Full Range Increasing (Proportional)  Increasing (Proportional) with Threshold  Exponential (Progressive) Payback Model  Full Range Flat Rate  Flat Rate with Threshold  Full Range Decreasing  Decreasing with Threshold  Inverse Exponential

Full-Range Flat Rate with Threshold Full-Range Decreasing with Threshold Full Range Increasing with Threshold Exponential Inverse Exponential Income Redistributive Policies

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Income Income Redistributive Policies Tax Reduced Allowance Added Income

Thank You ! Any Question ?