Program 3: Opportunities
- Gender
- Income Tax
- Poverty
- Social Security
- Taxes and Transfers
- Non-academic article
When a Baby Arrives: How Taxes and Transfers Shape the Child Penalty in Australia
Published: 26 Sep 2025
Until recently, researchers have typically followed an indirect approach to decomposing income inequality into its “fair” and “unfair” components, by examining income mobility. This study contributes to the existing literature by demonstrating the advantages of employing a direct approach, through measuring the contribution of various sources of inequality of opportunities. Based on recent Australian data, we estimate that at least 8 per cent of total income inequality before government transfers and taxes and at least 6 per cent of total income inequality after government transfers and taxes is attributable to factors outside of people’s control.
Martinez, A., Rampino, T., Western, M., Tomaszewski, W., & Roque, J. D. (2017). Estimating the Contribution of Circumstances that Reflect Inequality of Opportunities. Economic Papers: A journal of applied economics and policy, 36(4), 380-400.
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Please see https://lifecoursecentre.org.au/publications/estimating-the-contribution-of-circumstances-that-reflect-inequality-of-opportunities/ for the latest version.
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