distribution of wealth Flashcards

1
Q

Define wealth - give examples of wealth.

A

Ownership or assests - property, shares.

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2
Q

Define income - give examples.

A

Flow of resources recieved by the individual - wages, welfare benefits, pensions.

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3
Q

Define disposable income.

A

Income that a person has left after paying taxes.

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4
Q

Define discretionary income.

A

Income that is left after taxes and all necessary household bills and expenses have been paid.

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5
Q

Define marketable wealth - give examples.

A

Assets that can be brought and sold and turned into cash for the owner’s benefit - private car, a house, and other shares that can be sold.

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6
Q

Define non-marketable wealth.

A

Wealth that cannot be sold or cashed in.

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7
Q

Define productive property - give examples.

A

Wealth which provides an unearned income for its owner - houses which are rented out, factories, land, company shares which provide dividends.

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8
Q

Define consumption property - give examples.

A

Wealth for use by the owner - consumer goods such as fridges - that you own, which do not produce any income.

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9
Q

List the 5 ways that the government attempt to redistribute wealth.

A
  1. Income Tax
  2. Mansion Tax
  3. Social Welfare Benefits
  4. Inheritance Tax
  5. Capital Gains Tax
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10
Q

What is income tax?

A

Payable on earned and unearned income - generally progressive as it rises as earnings increase.

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11
Q

What is mansion tax?

A

People who own expensive properties could face 1% tax on them.

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12
Q

What are social welfare benefits?

A

From the state, like income support/jobseekers allowance, which are generally seen as an attempt to divert the resources obtained through taxation to the needy sections of society.

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13
Q

What is inheritance tax?

A

Tax payables on gifts of wealth before/after tax - intended to limit inheritance of vast quantities of wealth from one generation to the next.

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14
Q

What is capital gains tax?

A

Intended to reduce profits from dealing in property or shares, and is payable whenever these are sold.

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15
Q

List the factors that suggest why there is a failure in the distribution of wealth.

A
  1. Tax Evasion
  2. Tax Relief
  3. Failure to Claim Benefits
  4. Tax Avoidance Schemes
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16
Q

Define tax evasion.

A

An illegal strategy that involves not declaring tax/wealth to income revenues.

17
Q

Define tax relief.

A

Relief on paying tax for school fees, private pension etc.

18
Q

What is meant by failure to claim benefits?

A

Applications being too difficult/complicated to complete.

19
Q

What are tax avoidance schemes?

A

A legal strategy used by accountants/financial advisers - living abroad for a year, spreading wealth within the family etc.

20
Q

What is a strength of the welfare benefits?

A

They provide for everyone.

21
Q

List 3 other strengths of the distribution of wealth.

A
  1. It’s attempting to be a fair system.
  2. It covers a wide range of tax systems and resources, targeting different levels of earners.
  3. Income tax - facilitates more resources and services e.g NHS means free healthcare.
22
Q

Why would the highest earners be against most of these initiatives?

A

They have the most to lose.

23
Q

List 2 other limitation of the distribution of wealth.

A
  1. There is a welfare dependancy amongst certain groups - may drain resources.
  2. People still avoid paying tax through evasion - can be difficult to trace.