Goals of Taxation
Who Pays, Who Benefits
Universal vs. Targeted Debate
Show Me the Taxes
Policy in Practice
100

These are the three main goals of taxation discussed by Lightman & Lightman

What are equity, efficiency, and adequacy? 

100

This is the term for programs that everyone receives, regardless of income

What are universal programs?

100

Between universal and target, this approach is simpler to administer

What is universal?

100

This is the main federal tax used to finance Canadian social policy

What is personal income tax?

100

Name one social policy funded largely through taxation in Canada.

What is public healthcare, education, or income assistance?

200

This goal of taxation means treating people in similar circumstances the same way

What is horizontal equity?

200

This type of benefit targets only those who meet specific income or need criteria.

What are selective (or means-tested) programs?

200

This approach is more cost-efficient for limited budgets

What is targeted?

200

This kind of tax takes a larger percentage from low-income earners than from high-income earners

What is a regressive tax? 

200

How does public perception of fairness affect tax compliance?

The more people view taxes as fair and transparent, the more willing they are to pay. 

300

This principle means those who have more should contribute more.

What is vertical equity?

300

Chapter 7 argues that taxation and benefits are two sides of the same coin. What does that mean?

Financing (taxes) and spending (benefits) together determine redistribution and equity. 

300

What social or political advantage do universal programs often have?

They build broad public support and legitimacy.

300

This is an example of an indirect tax.

What is the GST/HST or sales tax?

300

Taxation plays this role in reducing inequality

What is redistributing income through progressive taxation and benefits? 

400

A tax system that collects enough to fund programs without distorting incentives achieves this goal

What is efficiency?

400

This is one major critique of targeted programs

What is that they can stigmatize recipients or miss those just above eligibility thresholds?

400

Targeted programs can create this economic disadvantage for recipients

What is the “welfare wall” or disincentive to earn more?

400

This type of tax is based on income brackets that rise with income

What is a progressive tax?

400

How might governments reform taxes to make financing more equitable?

By broadening tax bases, closing loopholes, or increasing progressivity.

500

True or false: Taxes are only a way to raise revenue.

False — they also shape redistribution, behavior, and social equity. 

500

This Canadian tax benefit blurs the line between taxation and welfare by being “refundable”

What is a refundable tax credit (e.g., GST/HST credit, Canada Child Benefit)?

500

In what way does taxation enable universal programs to be politically sustainable?

Broad-based taxes make all citizens contributors and beneficiaries, reinforcing solidarity.

500

How can tax credits act as social policy tools?

They redistribute income or incentivize behaviors (e.g., child benefits, green incentives).

500

In Lightman & Lightman’s framework, what’s the key challenge of financing social policy? 

Balancing adequate funding with political will and fairness.