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Labor supply responses to income tax free and bracket expansions

Panayiota Lyssiotou (Department of Economics, University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus)
Elena Savva (University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 2 November 2021

Issue publication date: 20 September 2022

379

Abstract

Purpose

An important concern of economic policy analysis is how income taxes affect labor supply since this is crucial in assessing the efficiency costs of taxation and designing labor income taxation. The focus in the literature has been mostly to study the responses of high earners and women. The authors contribute to this literature by focusing more on how middle earners respond to financial incentives and whether the responses are different between men and women.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors exploit substantial expansions in the level of individual income exempt from taxation and taxed at a lower marginal tax rate while the schedule of marginal tax rates remained the same. The authors adopt an empirical framework that is similar to Bosch and van der Klaauw (2012) and condition on the effects of other factors, such as inflows of foreign workers that may have affected the wages, participation and working hours of native males and females. The authors also conduct various sensitivity analyses to examine the robustness of the estimates.

Findings

The authors find robust evidence that the tax reforms increased the wages of medium and high educated married males and females significantly. They also had a positive impact on work participation that was more substantial for married women, especially the medium educated. The authors estimate significant positive own wage labor supply elasticities that are small and about the same for men and women when the authors condition on the labor outcome effects of inflows of EU and non-EU foreign workers, which changed the skill distribution of the economy and had a more significant impact on female labor outcomes. Smaller wage labor supply elasticities indicate lower disincentive effects and deadweight losses from the imposition of taxes and have implications on the design of optimal taxation of men and women.

Originality/value

Previous investigations of the labor supply responses of both men and women to a given policy change have been identified mostly by exploiting changes in joint income taxation and marginal tax rates. The authors exploit substantial expansions in the level of individual income exempt from taxation and taxed at a lower marginal tax rate while the schedule of marginal tax rates remained the same. The income effects of these reforms could be limited since the reduced marginal tax rates apply to only part of the income.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are very grateful to the Editor Prof. M Bahmani-Oskoee and an anonymous referee for their very useful comments and suggestions. The authors thank Theofanis Mamuneas, Federico Perali, Nikos Theodoropoulos and Panos Tsakloglou for comments and suggestions. The authors also would like to thank the University of Cyprus for financial support and the Department of Statistics and Research in Cyprus for making available the Family Expenditure Survey data. The authors are solely responsible for the interpretation of the data and all errors.

Citation

Lyssiotou, P. and Savva, E. (2022), "Labor supply responses to income tax free and bracket expansions", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 49 No. 7, pp. 1225-1239. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-03-2021-0128

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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