Transfer Payment: Definition, Types of Transfers, and Examples

Transfer Payment: A payment of money, usually from the government, for which there are no goods or services exchanged.

Investopedia / Julie Bang

What Is a Transfer Payment?

A transfer payment is a one-way payment to a person or organization which has given or exchanged no goods or services for it. This contrasts with a simple "payment," which in economics refers to a transfer of money in exchange for a product or service.

Generally, the phrase "transfer payment" is used to describe government payments to individuals through social programs such as welfare, student grants, and even Social Security. However, government payments to corporations—including unconditional bailouts and subsidies—are not commonly described as transfer payments.

Key Takeaways

  • A transfer payment is a payment of money for which there are no goods or services exchanged.
  • Transfer payments commonly refer to efforts by local, state, and federal governments to redistribute money to those in need.
  • In the U.S., Social Security and unemployment insurance are common types of transfer payments.
  • Corporate bailouts and subsidies are not commonly referred to as transfer payments.

Understanding Transfer Payments

In the U.S., transfer payments usually refer to payments made to individuals by the federal government through various social programs. These payments are considered a redistribution of wealth from the well-compensated to the poorly compensated. They are made both for humanitarian reasons and, at times of economic distress, to help stimulate the economy by putting more money into people's hands.

Types of Transfer Payments

The most well-known form of transfer payment is likely Social Security payments, whether for retirement or disability. These are considered transfer payments even though most recipients have paid into the system during their working lives. Similarly, unemployment payments are also considered transfer payments.

There are many other types of transfer payments. They can be made from one person to another or even from an individual to an organization. These can include individual donations to charities or non-profit organizations, or even a simple cash gift from one person to another.

Subsidies for education and training are also considered a type of government transfer payment. This includes transfers to companies or labor groups that provide educational services or operate apprenticeship programs.

Transfer payments do not include subsidies paid to farmers, manufacturers, and exporters, even though they are a one-way payment from the government.

Transfer Payments and the Economy

Transfer payments are often introduced or expanded during severe economic recessions. Social Security, for example, was created by the Roosevelt administration during the Great Depression.

More recently, though less grand in scale, in March 2020 Congress voted to provide direct cash payments of $1,200 to most Americans, totaling some $250 billion, as well as additional direct assistance to U.S. workers affected by the economic collapse. (Congress also approved $500 billion in bailouts for U.S. corporations.)

Many countries provide direct cash assistance to people during economic recessions as a way to support those in need and stimulate the economy. According to Keynesian economics, there is a "multiplier effect" to transfer payments, meaning every dollar in payments stimulates a chain reaction that results in more spending than merely the original dollar.

Article Sources
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  1. U.S. Congress. "H.R. 748, CARES Act," Pages 55, 190. Accessed Sept. 15, 2021.

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