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Aguero, Jorge M.; Marks, Mindy S. – Journal of Human Resources, 2011
We introduce a new instrument for family size, infertility, to investigate the causal relationship between children and female labor force participation. Infertility mimics an experiment where nature assigns an upper bound for family size, independent of a woman's background. This new instrument allows us to investigate the differential labor…
Descriptors: Mothers, Employed Women, Labor Supply, Developing Nations
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Fitzpatrick, Maria Donovan – Journal of Human Resources, 2012
Many argue that childcare costs limit the labor supply of mothers, though existing evidence has been mixed. Using a child's eligibility for public kindergarten in a regression discontinuity instrumental variables framework, I estimate how use of a particular subsidy, public school, affects maternal labor supply. I find public school enrollment…
Descriptors: Mothers, Labor Force, Labor Supply, Employed Women
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Aaronson, Daniel; French, Eric – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
This paper extends a standard intertemporal labor supply model to account for progressive taxation as well as the joint determination of hourly wages and hours worked. We show that these two factors can have implications for both estimating labor supply elasticities as well as for using these elasticities in tax analysis. Failure to account for…
Descriptors: Labor Supply, Models, Tax Rates, Correlation
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Ebenstein, Avraham – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
The local average treatment effect (LATE) may differ from the average treatment effect (ATE) when those influenced by the instrument are not representative of the overall population. Heterogeneity in treatment effects may imply that parameter estimates from 2SLS are uninformative regarding the average treatment effect, motivating a search for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Computation, Birth Rate, Labor Supply
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Cristia, Julian P. – Journal of Human Resources, 2008
Estimating the causal effect of a first child on female labor supply is complicated by the endogeneity of fertility. This paper addresses this problem by focusing on a sample of women from the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) who sought help to become pregnant. After a certain period, only some of these women gave birth. Results using this…
Descriptors: Females, Labor Supply, Influences, Pregnancy
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Cascio, Elizabeth U. – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
Since the mid-1960s, many state governments have introduced subsidies for school districts that offer kindergarten. This paper uses the staggered timing and age targeting of these grants to examine how the childcare subsidy implicit in public schooling affects maternal labor supply. Using data from five Censuses, I estimate that four of ten single…
Descriptors: Public Schools, State Aid, Grants, Kindergarten
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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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Haider, Steven J.; Loughran, David S. – Journal of Human Resources, 2008
Despite numerous empirical studies, there is surprisingly little agreement about whether the Social Security earnings test affects male labor supply. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive analysis of the labor supply effects of the earnings test using longitudinal administrative earnings data and more commonly used survey data. We find that…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Error of Measurement, Labor Supply, Males
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Donni, Olivier; Moreau, Nicolas – Journal of Human Resources, 2007
In Chiappori's (1988) collective model of labor supply, hours of work are supposed flexible. In many countries, however, male labor supply does not vary much. In that case, the husband's labor supply is no longer informative about the household decision process and individual preferences. To identify structural components of the model, additional…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Labor Market, French, Labor Supply
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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
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Thirumurthy, Harsha; Zivin, Joshua Graff; Goldstein, Markus – Journal of Human Resources, 2008
Using longitudinal survey data collected in collaboration with a treatment program, this paper estimates the economic impacts of antiretroviral treatment. The responses in two outcomes are studied: (1) labor supply of treated adult AIDS patients; and (2) labor supply of individuals in patients' households. Within six months after treatment…
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Labor, Economic Impact, Patients
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Garfinkel, Irwin – Journal of Human Resources, 1974
The major purpose of this paper is to examine the problems of geralizing from the Graduated Work Incentive experimental setting to the national labor-supply responses that would be generated by a negative income tax that replaced existing welfare programs for families headed by able-bodied males. (Author/BP)
Descriptors: Experimental Programs, Labor Supply, Models, Motivation
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Flood, Lennart; Hansen, Jorgen; Wahlberg, Roger – Journal of Human Resources, 2004
A structural, static model of household labor supply and multiple welfare program participation is formulated and estimated. Results suggest that labor supply among two-parent families in Sweden was quite inelastic.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Supply, Welfare Services, Family Involvement
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Genadek, Katie R.; Stock, Wendy A.; Stoddard, Christiana – Journal of Human Resources, 2007
We use a difference-in-difference-in-difference estimator to compare changes in labor force participation, weeks, and hours of work associated with no-fault divorce laws, allowing for differential responses for married women with and without children. Although other research has found that the labor supply of women in general does not respond to…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Mothers, Labor Supply, Marital Status
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Metcalf, Charles E. – Journal of Human Resources, 1974
Among the many problems in interpreting the results of the experiment is the determination of what can be inferred from a limited duration experiment about the behavioral effects of a negative income tax. This paper examines and interprets experimental data based on the labor supply model. (Author/BP)
Descriptors: Experimental Programs, Labor Supply, Models, Motivation
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