Papers
AEJ Applied2025

New Gig Work or Changes in Reporting? Understanding Self-Employment Trends in Tax Data

Andrew Garin, Emilie Jackson, Dmitri Koustas

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1
Latest record
2025-07-01
Primary source
AEJ Applied
TL;DR

We show that increases in the share of workers reporting self-employment to the IRS are not associated with changes in firm-reported payments to “gig” and other contract workers after 2005 but are driven primarily by...

AEJ AppliedLaborPublic FinanceRDIRS
Metadata matches
Sources
AEJ Applied
Fields
LaborPublic Finance
Methods and data
RDIRS
Abstract

We show that increases in the share of workers reporting self-employment to the IRS are not associated with changes in firm-reported payments to “gig” and other contract workers after 2005 but are driven primarily by self-reported earnings of individuals in the EITC phase-in range. We examine a regression discontinuity design that generates exogenous variation in tax rates at the end of the year after labor supply decisions are already sunk and find tax code incentives increase self-employment reporting conditional on actual labor supply. We show that reporting effects have grown over time as knowledge of the tax code spreads. (JEL C83, H24, H31, J22, J23)

Source versions
AEJ Applied2025-07-01
American Economic Journal Applied Economics 17(3):236-270
10.1257/app.20220483
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