Papers
AEJ Applied2025

Tax Incentives for Migrants with Mid-level Earnings: Evidence from the Netherlands †

Lisa Marie Timm, Massimo Giuliodori, Paul Muller

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

We examine how income taxes affect international mobility and wages.

AEJ AppliedLaborPublic FinanceRD
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Sources
AEJ Applied
Fields
LaborPublic Finance
Methods and data
RD
Abstract

We examine how income taxes affect international mobility and wages. We study a Dutch preferential tax scheme for migrants, which introduced an income threshold for eligibility in 2012. The threshold is low relative to similar schemes in other countries, thereby offering eligibility to migrants with mid-level earnings. We find migration more than doubles closely above the income threshold, while migration below the threshold remains unchanged. These effects appear to be driven by additional migration, while wage bargaining responses are limited. We estimate a migration elasticity ranging from 1.6 to 2.7, somewhat higher than most studies on high-income migrants have found. (JEL H24, H31, J15, J31, J82)

Source versions
AEJ Applied2025-07-01
American Economic Journal Applied Economics 17(3):42-79
10.1257/app.20230438
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