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Tax effects on work activity, industry mix and shadow economy size

Tax effects on work activity, industry mix and shadow economy size2004

Steven J. Davis

About this book

"Guided by a simple theory of task assignment and time allocation, we investigate the long run response to national differences in tax rates on labor income, payrolls and consumption. The theory implies that higher tax rates reduce work time in the market sector, increase the size of the shadow economy, alter the industry mix of market activity, and twist labor demand in a way that amplifies negative effects on market work and concentrates effects on the less skilled. We also describe conditions whereby cross-country OLS regressions yield unbiased estimates of the total effect of taxes, inclusive of indirect effects that work through government spending responses to tax revenues. Regressions on rich-country samples in the mid 1990s indicate that a unit standard deviation tax rate difference of 12.8 percentage points leads to 122 fewer market work hours per adult per year, a drop of 4.9 percentage points in the employment-population ratio, and a rise in the shadow economy equal to 3.8 percent of GDP. It also leads to 10 to 30 percent lower employment and value added shares in (a) retail trade and repairs, (b) eating, drinking and lodging, and (c) a broader industry group that includes wholesale and motor trade"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.

Details

First published
2004
OL Work ID
OL2975423W

Subjects

Case studiesIndustrial productivityLabor productivityInformal sector (Economics)Rates and tablesTaxation

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.