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taxationbut

Taxationbut is a term used in some policy discussions to describe a class of tax policies that aim to raise government revenue while mitigating adverse effects on households through targeted transfers, credits, or exemptions. The term does not refer to a single formal doctrine and is not widely standardized; it appears in think-tank briefs and online discussions as a shorthand for balancing taxation with redistribution or social objectives.

Key ideas associated with taxationbut include designing tax instruments that preserve incentives for work and investment

Rationale: proponents argue that taxationbut can improve equity without sacrificing revenue, and can make taxes more

Criticisms: critics warn that complexity and administrative costs may erode efficiency, that targeting can misallocate resources,

See also: taxation, fiscal policy, tax credits, refundable tax credits, carbon dividend, pay-for policies.

while
offsetting
burdens
on
low-
and
middle-income
households;
using
refundable
tax
credits,
rebates,
or
exemptions
to
protect
essential
consumption;
and
sometimes
earmarking
a
portion
of
revenue
for
targeted
programs
such
as
health,
education,
or
infrastructure.
Carbon
taxes
with
per-capita
or
income-based
dividends
are
cited
in
some
discussions
as
a
practical
embodiment
of
a
taxationbut
approach,
as
they
link
revenue
generation
to
direct
transfers.
palatable
by
providing
visible
compensation
to
those
who
bear
the
costs.
It
is
often
contrasted
with
flat
or
broad
tax
increases
that
do
not
include
compensatory
measures.
and
that
political
bargaining
can
undermine
both
revenue
and
redistribution
goals.
The
term
remains
largely
informal
and
is
not
commonly
used
in
formal
tax
law
or
comparative
policy
literature.