The state may provide financial assistance to families with dependent children either by reducing their tax burden or by increasing their welfare benefits. Both means of support increase their net wage, thus providing financial support.
This paper provides an overview of financial support amounts provided to families with dependent children or families with the youngest child aged 1 to 3, and of measures limiting such support. The lower tax burden of families with children ensues from lower income tax, not from the social and health care security systems.
Within this system, tax support provided to families with children is comparable to that provided to low-income families without children. Additional support provided to families with children includes tax benefits tied directly to children in the family, and tax credit for a dependent spouse.
Should the tax system not provide such benefits, families with children, or rather families with a youngest child aged 1 to 3 would have a higher effective tax rate than childless families with comparable income