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Maximum wage

A maximum wage, also often called a wage ceiling, is a legal limit on how much income an individual can earn.[1] It is a prescribed limitation which can be used to effect change in an economic structure, but its effects are unrelated to those of minimum wage laws used currently by some states to enforce minimum earnings.[2]

Implementation Edit

No major economy has a direct earnings limit, though some economies do incorporate the policy of highly progressive tax structures in the form of scaled taxation.

A vote to implement a maximum wage law in Switzerland failed with only a 34.7% vote for approval.[3]

Maximum liquid wealth Edit

A maximum liquid wealth policy restricts the amount of liquid wealth an individual is permitted to maintain, while giving them unrestricted access to non-liquid assets. That is to say, an individual may earn as much as they like during a given time period, but all earnings must be re-invested (spent) within an equivalent time period; all earnings not re-invested within this time period would be seized.

This policy is only arguably a valid maximum wage implementation, as it does not actually restrict the wages a person is allowed to maintain, but only restricts the amount of actual currency they are allowed to hold at any given time. Proponents of the policy argue that it enforces the ideals of a maximum wage without restricting actual capital growth or economic incentive.

Proponents believe wealth that is not re-invested in the economy is harmful to economic growth; that actual liquid currency not re-invested timely is indicative of an unfair trade, in which an individual has paid more for a good/service than the good/service was worth. This stems from the belief that currency should represent the actual value of a good or service.

When this policy is imposed, individual savings can only be held as solid assets like stocks, bonds, business, and property. Opponents argue that since a maximum liquid wealth policy makes no allowance for individual savings, it therefore assumes the non-importance of a bank and the loans that banks provide. Loans being essential to the economy, opponents argue, banks are an essential economic institution. Proponents of the maximum liquid wealth policy respond that government could be directly responsible for supplying loans to individuals; they also add that such an arrangement could result in vastly lower interest rates.

Relative earnings limit Edit

A relative earnings limit is a limit imposed upon a business, to the amount of compensation an individual is allowed, as a specific multiple of a company's lowest earner; or directly relative to the number of individuals a company employs and the average compensation provided to each individual employee, not including a certain percentage of the company's top earners. The former implementation has the advantage of limiting wage gaps. The latter implementation has the advantage of encouraging employment opportunities, as increasing employment would be a way for employers to boost their maximum earnings. A compromise would be to base the limit upon the number of employees had by a specific company and the compensation of that company's lowest earner.

A weakness in this method is that a company can simply hire outside firms to keep low wage employees off their payroll, while only having the top earning employees on the company's payroll, effectively bypassing the limits. However, the hiring of external employees will come at a higher total cost and will reduce company profits, something against which executives are often measured and compensated.

To moderate self-employed individuals, the maximum could be based on the average compensation of the nation's employed (GDP per capita) and a specific multiplier. As the number of self-employed individuals with no employees and who earn an excessive amount of money would be extremely limited, such a measure is unlikely to be implemented.

Direct earnings limit Edit

A direct earnings limit is a limit placed directly, usually as a number in terms of currency, upon the amount of compensation any individual is allowed to earn in a given time period.

Scaled taxation Edit

Scaled taxation is a method of progressive taxation that raises the rate at which the principal sum is taxed, directly relative to the amount of the principal. This type of taxation is normally applied to income taxes, although other types of taxation can be scaled.

In the case of a maximum wage, a scaled tax would be applied so that the top earners in a society would be taxed extremely large percentages of their income. Modern income tax systems, allowing salary raises to be reflected by a raise in after tax income, tax each individual note of currency[clarification needed] in each particular bracket at the same rate.[4] An example follows.

Example
Calculated amounts shown for top of bracket. Any currency may be substituted for dollars.
Tax bracket Width of bracket Marginal
tax rate
Tax paid
on bracket
Accumulated
after tax income
Effective tax rate
(rounded):
Nil – $40,000 $40,000 15.00% $6,000 $34,000 15.00%
$40,000 – $100,000 $60,000 35.00% $21,000 $73,000 27.00%
$100,000 – $175,000 $75,000 50.00% $37,500 $110,500 36.86%
$175,000 – $250,000 $75,000 60.00% $45,000 $140,500 43.80%
$250,000 – $500,000 $250,000 75.00% $187,500 $203,000 59.40%
Above $500,000 90.00% Over 59.40%

History Edit

In 1350 positions in the church were in high demand, due to deaths from the Black Plague eradicating the clergy. Archbishop of Canterbury, Simon Islip issued a letter condemning "priests [that] care more for money than for the safety of their soul",[5] stating that priests were forgoing their duty to the poor in order to serve the rich in private chapels. Islip instituted a maximum annual wage for priests, as well as a fine for the 'giver' and 'receiver' of those caught offer private tithes above the maximum.[6]

In England, the Statute of Artificers 1563 implemented statutes of compulsory labor and fixed maximum wage scales; Justices of the Peace could fix wages according "to the plenty or scarcity of the time".

To counteract the increase in prevailing wages due to scarcity of labor, American colonies in the 17th century created a ceiling wage and minimum hours of employment.[7]

In the early Soviet Union, in the period 1920–1932, communist party members were subject to a maximum wage, the partmaximum. Its demise is seen as the onset of the rise of the nomenklatura class of Soviet apparatchiks. The idea that any individual could earn money by their labor, instead of earning for the community, undermined the initial principles of communism.[original research?]

In 1933, Washington State Representative Wesley Lloyd proposed an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would have limited annual incomes to $1 million.[8] His contemporary colleague John Snyder introduced a companion amendment that would have limited personal wealth to $1 million. Neither proposed amendment, however, received enough votes to begin the ratification process.[9]

In 1942, during World War II, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed a maximum income of $25,000 ($447,760 in 2022 dollars) during the war:[10][11][12]

At the same time, while the number of individual Americans affected is small, discrepancies between low personal incomes and very high personal incomes should be lessened; and I therefore believe that in time of this grave national danger, when all excess income should go to win the war, no American citizen ought to have a net income, after he has paid his taxes, of more than $25,000 a year. It is indefensible that those who enjoy large incomes from State and local securities should be immune from taxation while we are at war. Interest on such securities should be subject at least to surtaxes.

— Message to Congress on an Economic Stabilization Program. April 27, 1942

This was proposed to be implemented by a 100% marginal tax on all income over $40,000 (after-tax income of $25,000). While this was not implemented, the Revenue Act of 1942 implemented an 88% marginal tax rate on income over $200,000, together with a 5% "Victory Tax" with post-war credits, hence temporarily yielding a 93% top tax rate (though 5% was subsequently returned in credits).[10]

After decades of social democratic governments, the Swedish children's author Astrid Lindgren faced an infamous marginal tax rate of 102% in 1976, in effect creating a wage ceiling. Though the example was partly due to inverted loop holes in the tax code, the figure was seen as an important catalyst for the results in the election that year, in which the Social Democratic Party lost power after 40 consecutive years in power. After a "tax rebellion" and demanded the top marginal tax rates were reduced to 50% in the late 1980s.[citation needed]

Since the 1990s, the chief proponent of a maximum wage in the United States has been Sam Pizzigati;[13] see References, particularly (Pizzigati 2004).

In his 2000 run for the Green Party presidential nomination, Jello Biafra called for a maximum wage of $100,000 in the United States, and the reduction of the income tax to zero for all income below that level. Biafra claimed he would increase taxes for the wealthy and reduce taxes for those in the lower and middle classes.[citation needed] Many Green parties have a maximum wage in their manifesto, which they argue would prevent conspicuous consumption and the subsequent environmental damage that they believe ensues, while allowing the financing of jobs and a guaranteed minimum income for the poorest workers.

In his campaign for the French presidency in 2012, Jean-Luc Mélenchon argued in favour of a tax rate of 100% on incomes over 360,000.[14]

Association football Edit

In the United Kingdom until 1901, individual clubs had set their own wage policies. That year, the Football League ratified a maximum weekly wage for footballers of £4 (2012: £368). This severely limited the ability of the best players in the country to forgo the need to take paid employment outside of football and, this in turn, led to the formation of The Players' Union in 1907.

By the summer of 1928 players could earn a weekly maximum of £8 (2012: £408), although clubs routinely found ways to increase this.[15] Arsenal player Eddie Hapgood supplemented his income by fashion modelling and advertising chocolate.[16]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Dietl, H., Duschl, T. and Lang, M. (2010): "Executive Salary Caps: What Politicians, Regulators and Managers Can Learn from Major Sports Leagues", University of Zurich, ISU Working Paper Series No. 129.
  2. ^ Dodd, E. Merrick (1 January 1943). "From Maximum Wages to Minimum Wages: Six Centuries of Regulation of Employment Contracts". Columbia Law Review. 43 (5): 643–687. doi:10.2307/1117231. JSTOR 1117231.
  3. ^ Hooper, John (24 November 2013). "Switzerland votes against cap on executive pay" – via The Guardian.
  4. ^ "TaxAlmanac".
  5. ^ Aberth, John (2005). The Black Death : the Great Mortality of 1348–1350: a Brief History with Documents. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 104–106. ISBN 978-1-349-73422-1.
  6. ^ Putnam, Bertha Haven (1915). "Maximum Wage-Laws for Priests after the Black Death, 1348–1381". The American Historical Review. 21 (1): 12–32. doi:10.2307/1836696. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1836696.
  7. ^
  8. ^ Bomboy, Scott (23 February 2018). "Five "unusual" amendments that never made it into the Constitution". constitutioncenter.org. National Constitution Center. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  9. ^ Pumphrey, Clint (26 August 2016). "10 Weirdest Failed Constitutional Amendments". HowStuffWorks.com. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  10. ^ a b (Pizzigati 2004, Historic Struggles, pp. 440–441)
  11. ^ How About a Maximum Wage? : Taxation: F.D.R. wanted to cap incomes of the wealthy – an idea whose time may have come again., Los Angeles Times, April 8, 1992, Sam Pizzigati
  12. ^ "CPI Inflation Calculator". www.bls.gov. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
  13. ^ "Corporate Greed, Meet The Maximum Wage", by Steven Greenhouse, The New York Times, June 16, 1996
  14. ^ "French give thumbs up to Mélenchon's plan to boost minimum wage". 12 April 2012.
  15. ^ John McManus, ‘McGrory, James Edward [Jimmy] (1904–1982)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2010
  16. ^ Jeffrey Hill, ‘Hapgood, Edris Albert [Eddie] (1908–1973)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004[ISBN missing]

External links Edit

  • TaxAlmanac – a wiki created by tax professionals with detailed information on US IRS Tax Law and the only known free up to date copy of the US Internal Revenue Code
  • of wages, skill, and utility
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived March 31, 2009) - an editorial exploring the pros and cons of a maximum wage

maximum, wage, maximum, wage, also, often, called, wage, ceiling, legal, limit, much, income, individual, earn, prescribed, limitation, which, used, effect, change, economic, structure, effects, unrelated, those, minimum, wage, laws, used, currently, some, sta. A maximum wage also often called a wage ceiling is a legal limit on how much income an individual can earn 1 It is a prescribed limitation which can be used to effect change in an economic structure but its effects are unrelated to those of minimum wage laws used currently by some states to enforce minimum earnings 2 Contents 1 Implementation 1 1 Maximum liquid wealth 1 2 Relative earnings limit 1 3 Direct earnings limit 1 4 Scaled taxation 2 History 2 1 Association football 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksImplementation EditNo major economy has a direct earnings limit though some economies do incorporate the policy of highly progressive tax structures in the form of scaled taxation A vote to implement a maximum wage law in Switzerland failed with only a 34 7 vote for approval 3 Maximum liquid wealth Edit A maximum liquid wealth policy restricts the amount of liquid wealth an individual is permitted to maintain while giving them unrestricted access to non liquid assets That is to say an individual may earn as much as they like during a given time period but all earnings must be re invested spent within an equivalent time period all earnings not re invested within this time period would be seized This policy is only arguably a valid maximum wage implementation as it does not actually restrict the wages a person is allowed to maintain but only restricts the amount of actual currency they are allowed to hold at any given time Proponents of the policy argue that it enforces the ideals of a maximum wage without restricting actual capital growth or economic incentive Proponents believe wealth that is not re invested in the economy is harmful to economic growth that actual liquid currency not re invested timely is indicative of an unfair trade in which an individual has paid more for a good service than the good service was worth This stems from the belief that currency should represent the actual value of a good or service When this policy is imposed individual savings can only be held as solid assets like stocks bonds business and property Opponents argue that since a maximum liquid wealth policy makes no allowance for individual savings it therefore assumes the non importance of a bank and the loans that banks provide Loans being essential to the economy opponents argue banks are an essential economic institution Proponents of the maximum liquid wealth policy respond that government could be directly responsible for supplying loans to individuals they also add that such an arrangement could result in vastly lower interest rates Relative earnings limit Edit A relative earnings limit is a limit imposed upon a business to the amount of compensation an individual is allowed as a specific multiple of a company s lowest earner or directly relative to the number of individuals a company employs and the average compensation provided to each individual employee not including a certain percentage of the company s top earners The former implementation has the advantage of limiting wage gaps The latter implementation has the advantage of encouraging employment opportunities as increasing employment would be a way for employers to boost their maximum earnings A compromise would be to base the limit upon the number of employees had by a specific company and the compensation of that company s lowest earner A weakness in this method is that a company can simply hire outside firms to keep low wage employees off their payroll while only having the top earning employees on the company s payroll effectively bypassing the limits However the hiring of external employees will come at a higher total cost and will reduce company profits something against which executives are often measured and compensated To moderate self employed individuals the maximum could be based on the average compensation of the nation s employed GDP per capita and a specific multiplier As the number of self employed individuals with no employees and who earn an excessive amount of money would be extremely limited such a measure is unlikely to be implemented Direct earnings limit Edit A direct earnings limit is a limit placed directly usually as a number in terms of currency upon the amount of compensation any individual is allowed to earn in a given time period Scaled taxation Edit Main article Progressive tax Scaled taxation is a method of progressive taxation that raises the rate at which the principal sum is taxed directly relative to the amount of the principal This type of taxation is normally applied to income taxes although other types of taxation can be scaled In the case of a maximum wage a scaled tax would be applied so that the top earners in a society would be taxed extremely large percentages of their income Modern income tax systems allowing salary raises to be reflected by a raise in after tax income tax each individual note of currency clarification needed in each particular bracket at the same rate 4 An example follows ExampleCalculated amounts shown for top of bracket Any currency may be substituted for dollars Tax bracket Width of bracket Marginaltax rate Tax paidon bracket Accumulatedafter tax income Effective tax rate rounded Nil 40 000 40 000 15 00 6 000 34 000 15 00 40 000 100 000 60 000 35 00 21 000 73 000 27 00 100 000 175 000 75 000 50 00 37 500 110 500 36 86 175 000 250 000 75 000 60 00 45 000 140 500 43 80 250 000 500 000 250 000 75 00 187 500 203 000 59 40 Above 500 000 90 00 Over 59 40 History EditIn 1350 positions in the church were in high demand due to deaths from the Black Plague eradicating the clergy Archbishop of Canterbury Simon Islip issued a letter condemning priests that care more for money than for the safety of their soul 5 stating that priests were forgoing their duty to the poor in order to serve the rich in private chapels Islip instituted a maximum annual wage for priests as well as a fine for the giver and receiver of those caught offer private tithes above the maximum 6 In England the Statute of Artificers 1563 implemented statutes of compulsory labor and fixed maximum wage scales Justices of the Peace could fix wages according to the plenty or scarcity of the time To counteract the increase in prevailing wages due to scarcity of labor American colonies in the 17th century created a ceiling wage and minimum hours of employment 7 In the early Soviet Union in the period 1920 1932 communist party members were subject to a maximum wage the partmaximum Its demise is seen as the onset of the rise of the nomenklatura class of Soviet apparatchiks The idea that any individual could earn money by their labor instead of earning for the community undermined the initial principles of communism original research In 1933 Washington State Representative Wesley Lloyd proposed an amendment to the U S Constitution that would have limited annual incomes to 1 million 8 His contemporary colleague John Snyder introduced a companion amendment that would have limited personal wealth to 1 million Neither proposed amendment however received enough votes to begin the ratification process 9 In 1942 during World War II US President Franklin D Roosevelt proposed a maximum income of 25 000 447 760 in 2022 dollars during the war 10 11 12 At the same time while the number of individual Americans affected is small discrepancies between low personal incomes and very high personal incomes should be lessened and I therefore believe that in time of this grave national danger when all excess income should go to win the war no American citizen ought to have a net income after he has paid his taxes of more than 25 000 a year It is indefensible that those who enjoy large incomes from State and local securities should be immune from taxation while we are at war Interest on such securities should be subject at least to surtaxes Message to Congress on an Economic Stabilization Program April 27 1942 This was proposed to be implemented by a 100 marginal tax on all income over 40 000 after tax income of 25 000 While this was not implemented the Revenue Act of 1942 implemented an 88 marginal tax rate on income over 200 000 together with a 5 Victory Tax with post war credits hence temporarily yielding a 93 top tax rate though 5 was subsequently returned in credits 10 After decades of social democratic governments the Swedish children s author Astrid Lindgren faced an infamous marginal tax rate of 102 in 1976 in effect creating a wage ceiling Though the example was partly due to inverted loop holes in the tax code the figure was seen as an important catalyst for the results in the election that year in which the Social Democratic Party lost power after 40 consecutive years in power After a tax rebellion and demanded the top marginal tax rates were reduced to 50 in the late 1980s citation needed Since the 1990s the chief proponent of a maximum wage in the United States has been Sam Pizzigati 13 see References particularly Pizzigati 2004 harv error no target CITEREFPizzigati2004 help In his 2000 run for the Green Party presidential nomination Jello Biafra called for a maximum wage of 100 000 in the United States and the reduction of the income tax to zero for all income below that level Biafra claimed he would increase taxes for the wealthy and reduce taxes for those in the lower and middle classes citation needed Many Green parties have a maximum wage in their manifesto which they argue would prevent conspicuous consumption and the subsequent environmental damage that they believe ensues while allowing the financing of jobs and a guaranteed minimum income for the poorest workers In his campaign for the French presidency in 2012 Jean Luc Melenchon argued in favour of a tax rate of 100 on incomes over 360 000 14 Association football Edit In the United Kingdom until 1901 individual clubs had set their own wage policies That year the Football League ratified a maximum weekly wage for footballers of 4 2012 368 This severely limited the ability of the best players in the country to forgo the need to take paid employment outside of football and this in turn led to the formation of The Players Union in 1907 By the summer of 1928 players could earn a weekly maximum of 8 2012 408 although clubs routinely found ways to increase this 15 Arsenal player Eddie Hapgood supplemented his income by fashion modelling and advertising chocolate 16 See also Edit nbsp Economics portalFamily wage Gini coefficient Income inequality metrics Living wage Minimum wage One dollar salary Partmaximum Salary cap Social welfare Wage dispersion Wage ratio Welfare economicsReferences Edit Dietl H Duschl T and Lang M 2010 Executive Salary Caps What Politicians Regulators and Managers Can Learn from Major Sports Leagues University of Zurich ISU Working Paper Series No 129 Dodd E Merrick 1 January 1943 From Maximum Wages to Minimum Wages Six Centuries of Regulation of Employment Contracts Columbia Law Review 43 5 643 687 doi 10 2307 1117231 JSTOR 1117231 Hooper John 24 November 2013 Switzerland votes against cap on executive pay via The Guardian TaxAlmanac Aberth John 2005 The Black Death the Great Mortality of 1348 1350 a Brief History with Documents New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 104 106 ISBN 978 1 349 73422 1 Putnam Bertha Haven 1915 Maximum Wage Laws for Priests after the Black Death 1348 1381 The American Historical Review 21 1 12 32 doi 10 2307 1836696 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1836696 U S Department of Labor history on wage laws in England and the American Colonies Bomboy Scott 23 February 2018 Five unusual amendments that never made it into the Constitution constitutioncenter org National Constitution Center Retrieved 28 October 2019 Pumphrey Clint 26 August 2016 10 Weirdest Failed Constitutional Amendments HowStuffWorks com Retrieved 27 October 2019 a b Pizzigati 2004 Historic Struggles pp 440 441 harv error no target CITEREFPizzigati2004 help How About a Maximum Wage Taxation F D R wanted to cap incomes of the wealthy an idea whose time may have come again Los Angeles Times April 8 1992 Sam Pizzigati CPI Inflation Calculator www bls gov Retrieved 2019 04 05 Corporate Greed Meet The Maximum Wage by Steven Greenhouse The New York Times June 16 1996 French give thumbs up to Melenchon s plan to boost minimum wage 12 April 2012 John McManus McGrory James Edward Jimmy 1904 1982 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2010 Jeffrey Hill Hapgood Edris Albert Eddie 1908 1973 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 ISBN missing External links EditTaxAlmanac a wiki created by tax professionals with detailed information on US IRS Tax Law and the only known free up to date copy of the US Internal Revenue Code A simple microeconomic explanation of wages skill and utility Would a maximum wage make life better at the Wayback Machine archived March 31 2009 an editorial exploring the pros and cons of a maximum wage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maximum wage amp oldid 1169985468, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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