Does Canada have a hidden ‘wealthfare’ system? The policy history and household use of tax-preferred savings instruments in Canada
Authors: Jennifer Robson
Overview
Abstract (English)
Canada has account-based, tax-preferred savings instruments that are delivered through the financial services sector and that receive generous support through federal income tax incentives and direct transfers. In this thesis, I ask whether there is adequate evidence to treat this set of tax-preferred savings instruments as a hidden welfare system, and, whether the system is progressive or regressive in distributing public support for individual or household saving and accumulation of assets. The thesis presents three different studies of the set of tax-preferred instruments: a history of each instrument, an analysis of household data on ownership and allocations, an exploratory qualitative study that explores consumer perceptions, understanding and use of these savings instruments.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | PhD dissertation |
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Author | Jennifer Robson |
Publication Year | 2014 |
Title | Does Canada have a hidden ‘wealthfare’ system? The policy history and household use of tax-preferred savings instruments in Canada |
City | Ottawa, ON |
Department | School of Public Policy and Administration |
University | Carleton University |
Publication Language | English |
- Jennifer Robson
- Does Canada have a hidden ‘wealthfare’ system? The policy history and household use of tax-preferred savings instruments in Canada
- Jennifer Robson
- Carleton University
- 2014