Taxes and Labour Supply Theory, Evidence and PolicyDavid .ppt
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1、Taxes and Labour Supply Theory, Evidence and PolicyDavid Phillips (IFS),Outline,The Basics: Income, Substitution and Deadweight Loss Enriching the Model: Fixed costs and more 3. Measurement Issues: Econometric Problems 4. A Review of the Emprical Evidence Alternate Measures: Taxable Income Elasticit
2、ies Policies: Mini Jobs for Lone ParentsConclusions,The Basics,Labour Supply is the supply of effort and time by individuals for monetary compensation. Working out revenue implications of tax reforms Working out the optimal tax rate structure.Theoretical and empirical work has traditionally focused
3、upon hours of work but more recently a recognition of: The participation decision (extensive margin) Effort and Compensation FormBut what basic lessons can we use from Econ 101?,Income and Substitution Effects,H,l,NI,A,A,A,Higher tax rate reduces net income. If leisure is a normal good this reduces
4、demand for leisure and increases Labour Supply.,Higher tax rate reduces the marginal wage and hence the price of an extra hour of leisure. This acts to decrease Labour supply.,Tax has an ambiguous effect on Labour Supply,Abolition of the 10p Starting Rate And Cutting Basic Rate to 20p,H,l,NI,Old Tax
5、 Schedule,New Tax Schedule,What about Labour Supply?,Abolition of the 10p Starting Rate And Cutting Basic Rate to 20p,Those not working or earning less than the personal allowance are unaffected. Those previously paying starting rate have lower income (work more) but face a higher marginal rate (wor
6、k less) Ambiguous. Those paying basic rate and earning upto about 19,000 have lower income (work more) and a lower marginal rate (work more) Work MORE. Those paying basic rate and earning more than 19,000 have higher income (work less) but face a lower marginal rate (work more) - Ambiguous,Elasticit
7、y of Labour Supply,There are two types of elasticity we are interested in: The uncompensated elasticity. The compensated elasticity.Linked together by the Slutsky Equation:h = m - (w*h)/(w*T+y)* i h = Compensated Elasticity w = Wage m= Uncompensated Elasticity h = hours of work i = Income Elasticity
8、 T = time endowment y = Unearned Income,Tax Rates and Tax Revenues,The uncompensated elasticity determines revenue:Change in Revenue (1- m)*(%(1-t)w)*w*h*t,H,l,NI,A,A,Here a tax rise increases revenue but if labour supply is elastic would see a fall in revenue.,Tax Rates and Deadweight Loss,When sub
9、stitution occurs there is always deadweight loss. It is determined by the compensated elasticity.,The Hours Distribution,Now imagine a tax cut. The model predicts some not working will enter work and do 1 or 2 hours per week.,But we dont observe this. Why?,Adding Fixed Costs of Work,When you start w
10、ork there are certain fixed costs:Transport costs Work clothing costsChildcare costs And others,H,A,NI,A,Fixed costs mean not working better than working few hours -provided leisure and income are both goods,l,The Welfare System: Non Convexity,The welfare system (benefits and tax credits) mean that
11、people on low incomes can face very high effective marginal tax rates. This non convexity causes similar discontinuous labour supply responses.,Introducing non-convexities (e.g. WFTC) can encourage jumps in labour supply (e.g. From 10 to 30 hours),A,A,H,l,NI,The Family: Harmony or Bargaining?,Unitar
12、y Model: Family is a single unit with a single utility function and behaviour of all members chosen to maximise this. Uf(c, li, lj) This implies: Full income poolingSymmetry of response to changes in other partners wage. Neither Hold,Collective Model: Family as a group of individuals who engage in (
13、pareto-efficient) bargaining. This group of model allows one to extend models from just labour supply to looking at intra-household allocations of welfare.,Putting it together,hi = f(wi,wj, t, b, yi, yj, fi, fj, c, r)t = tax system b = benefit system f = fixed costs r = real interest rate Analysis o
14、f Labour supply cant be done by a simple OLS regression of hours on wages because of the complexity of the budget constraint and substitution over time and within the household.,Econometric Issues (1),You have data a cross section of hours, wages and demographic characteristics. But theres a problem
15、.People have different preferences for work/leisure.Those who like work are likely to work longer hours.They are also likely to work harder, engage in training more, have tried harder at school and are probably more able. Spurious positive correlation between hours and wagesIf taxes exhibit increasi
16、ng marginal rates, those working longer hours will face higher marginal rates and have lower net wages. Spurious negative correlation between hours and wages,Econometric Issues (2),Second Generation models attempted to account for the downward bias induced by increasing marginal rates of tax. very c
17、arefully modelled the tax system.assume utility maximising and rational behaviour.People bunch at the kinks as marginal rates change. Desired labour supply below kink at post-kink tax rate, and above kink at pre-kink tax rate. When you combine this with a linear labour supply modelRestricts so that
18、must estimate a positive uncompensated wage elasticity. H = + W + Y,Econometric Issues (3),Solutions: Use time series changes in wages (potentially a panel data series). Preferably have exogenous reforms e.g. Reduction of top rates of income tax, introduction of E.I.T.C.Remember to control for aggre
19、gate preference changes (e.g. Social acceptability of women working).E.G Blundell, Duncan & Meghir (1998)Avoid modelling the complex tax system by using only women paying basic rate (nearly linear budget constraint).Avoid preference problem by making use of changes in income distribution and tax ref
20、orm in the 1980s.Makes use in differential changes in post-tax wages for different cohorts and educational groups.,Econometric Issues (4),Solutions:Treat labour supply as discrete (e.g. full time, part time, not work) and estimate income at these points using full tax and benefit system.E.G Meghir &
21、 Phillips (2008)Men have a 1-0 choice of working or not, with income in work estimated as a weighted average of income at various hours points. Use predicted wages for both non-workers and workers to account for (spurious) correlation of hours of work and pre-tax wages due to preferences.Use the dif
22、ferential trends across regions in wages and housing benefits (out of work income) as exogenous changes in work incentives.,Elasticity Estimates (Female),Elasticity Estimates (Male),Other aspects of Labour Supply,So far we have focused on hours but what about other aspects of labour supply?intensity
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