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redistributive

[ ree-di-strib-yuh-tiv ]

adjective

, Economics.
  1. favoring, supporting, or practicing income redistribution:

    the redistributive effects of public spending.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of redistributive1

First recorded in 1880–85; redistribute + -ive

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Example Sentences

This model is one lifted from American franchise leagues, albeit without the redistributive elements like drafts and salary caps.

A serious effort to make life less unfair for neglected kids would likely require enacting bigger, more ambitious redistributive social programs—social programs that are very unlikely to be enacted given the state of 21st-century American politics.

The authors argue for some redistributive policies, like increased financial aid for post-secondary education.

Real conservatives stand outside this conversation: They believe that virtually no redistributive spending is justified.

Further, Obamacare is redistributive, as Jonathan Cohn of The New Republic and Tom Edsall at the New York Times acknowledge.

The redistributive impulse that is Obamacare wreaked havoc in the 2010 midterms and may do so again.

But he is dead wrong to suggest that government is simply redistributive or worse, a dead-weight drag on the economy.

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