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Powell, David – Journal of Human Resources, 2012
Income taxes distort the relationship between wages and nontaxable amenities. When the marginal tax rate increases, amenities become more valuable as the compensating differential for low-amenity jobs is taxed away. While there is evidence that the provision of amenities responds to taxes, the literature has ignored the consequences for job…
Descriptors: Work Environment, Wages, Tax Rates, Employment Practices
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Heim, Bradley T. – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
This paper proposes a new method for estimating family labor supply in the presence of taxes. This method accounts for continuous hours choices, measurement error, unobserved heterogeneity in tastes for work, the nonlinear form of the tax code, and fixed costs of work in one comprehensive specification. Estimated on data from the 2001 PSID, the…
Descriptors: Labor Supply, Taxes, Computation, Error of Measurement
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Heim, Bradley T. – Journal of Human Resources, 2007
This paper demonstrates the extent to which married women's labor supply elasticities have changed over the past quarter century. Estimates from March Current Population Survey data suggest that these elasticities have decreased substantially, by 60 percent for the hours wage elasticity (from 0.36 to 0.14), 70 percent for the hours income…
Descriptors: Wages, Marital Status, Income, Ethnic Groups