When a 68-year-old retiree receives a Social Security check, she hasn't produced anything in exchange for that payment — it is not wages, interest, or profit. It is a transfer: money from current workers' payroll taxes moved to a retired beneficiary. When a laid-off factory worker receives unemployment insurance, it is money from the unemployment insurance fund (funded by employer payroll taxes) transferred to someone who is between jobs. Both payments put money into the recipient's hands without any corresponding addition to current production. They are transfers, not factor payments — and that distinction has significant consequences for how they are measured, analyzed, and debated.
In plain terms
A transfer payment is a government payment to an individual or household that is not made in exchange for goods, services, or factors of production. Unlike wages (payment for labor), interest (payment for capital use), or rent (payment for land), a transfer payment is explicitly redistributive — it moves income from one group (taxpayers, or borrowers) to another (recipients) without corresponding productive activity by the recipient.
Major U.S. transfer programs by category:
Social insurance: Social Security retirement and disability (OASDI), Medicare, unemployment insurance — programs workers contribute to during their working years and draw from based on qualifying events.
Means-tested assistance: SNAP, Medicaid, SSI, housing vouchers, CHIP — programs for low-income households based on financial need.
Tax credits: the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit function as transfers through the tax system — refundable credits that provide net payments to low-income households.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis tracks transfer payments as a component of personal income — in 2023, government social benefits to persons accounted for approximately 18 percent of total U.S. personal income, up from about 7 percent in 1960.
Why it works this way
Transfer payments are excluded from GDP because GDP measures current production — the value of newly produced goods and services. Transfers don't create new output; they redistribute existing purchasing power. Counting them in GDP would double-count: the productive activity that generated the tax revenue funding the transfer is already counted in GDP; counting the transfer again would misrepresent economic output.
However, transfers affect GDP indirectly through their effect on consumption. Recipients typically spend a high fraction of transfer income (high marginal propensity to consume), which stimulates demand and production — the fiscal multiplier effect. The Federal Reserve's research on fiscal policy effectiveness estimates transfer multipliers of 0.5–1.5 depending on economic conditions and recipient characteristics.
A real example
The expansion of Child Tax Credit payments in 2021 — making them fully refundable and payable monthly — provided direct cash transfers to roughly 39 million families with children. The Census Bureau's Supplemental Poverty Measure data showed child poverty falling to a historic low of 5.2 percent in 2021, from 9.7 percent in 2020, largely attributable to these expanded transfer payments — the most dramatic single-year poverty reduction in U.S. history, achieved through transfer policy design.
Why it matters
Transfer payments are the primary tool for reducing poverty, supporting retirement security, and maintaining consumer demand during downturns. Their size, design, eligibility criteria, and funding mechanism are central to fiscal policy debates. The tradeoffs — between adequacy of benefits, work incentives, fiscal cost, and targeting efficiency — are the substance of the policy debate over every major social program.





