Tax policy and labor market performance / Jonas Agell and Peter Birch Sørensen, editors.
2006
HJ2599.5 .T26 2006eb
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Title
Tax policy and labor market performance / Jonas Agell and Peter Birch Sørensen, editors.
ISBN
9780262266864 (electronic bk.)
0262266865 (electronic bk.)
1429409908
9781429409902
0262012294
9780262012294
0262266865 (electronic bk.)
1429409908
9781429409902
0262012294
9780262012294
Publication Details
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 2006.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xviii, 322 pages) : illustrations.
Call Number
HJ2599.5 .T26 2006eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
331.1094
Summary
The effect of tax policies and welfare state incentives on the performance of the labor market: theoretical and empirical analyses by leading European and American economists.High unemployment in many European OECD countries has been attributed to factors ranging from rigid wages and low job mobility to an interaction of high taxes and generous social benefits that may discourage labor force participation and encourage the growth of an underground economy. This CESifo volume analyzes the effect of tax policy and, more generally, welfare state incentives, on the performance of the labor market. The contributors, all leading international economists, take both theoretical and empirical approaches; the book includes general overviews as well as in-depth analyses of specific policies. Some chapters take a broad perspective on taxation and labor markets, considering such topics as the effects of taxes in both the conventional model of a competitive labor market and a more realistic imperfect market, the observed work differentials between Europe and the United States, and the potential for progressive taxes and redistributive benefits to boost employment. Other chapters examine the effects of tax reforms, including the Earned Income Tax Credit, and the wage-increasing effects of progressive income taxes in a highly unionized labor market. Finally, the contributors analyze the effects of employment protection and tax penalties on the growth of the underground economy. The insights offered in these studies will be valuable to the policy analyst as well as to the academic theorist.ContributorsJonas Agell, Dan Anderberg, Sren Arnberg, A. Lans Bovenberg, Nada Eissa, Anders Holm, Hilary Hoynes, Henrik Jacobsen Kleven, Ann-Sofie Kolm, Birthe Larsen, Stephen Nickell, Peter Birch Srensen, Frederick van der Ploeg, Claus Thustrup Kreiner, Torben Trans
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