Labor Supply Responses and Adjustment Frictions: A Tax-Free Year in Iceland
Jósef Sigurdsson
Labor income earned in Iceland in 1987 went untaxed.
Labor income earned in Iceland in 1987 went untaxed. I use this episode to study labor supply responses to temporary wage changes. Using a population-wide dataset of earnings and working time and two identification strategies, I estimate intensive and extensive margin Frisch elasticities of 0.4 and 0.09, respectively. Workers with the ability to adjust drive these average responses: extensive margin by young and close-to-retirement cohorts and intensive margin responses by workers in temporally flexible jobs, though secondary jobs contribute to one-tenth of the response. The results suggest that adjustment frictions may similarly explain differences in elasticities within and across countries. (JEL H24, H31, J22)
Public Financing and Racial Disparities: Does a Rising Tide Always Lift All Boats?
Tian Qiu
The Impact of EITC on Education, Labour Market Trajectories, and Inequalities
Julien Albertini, Arthur Poirier, Anthony Terriau
Childcare, Labor Supply, and Business Development: Experimental Evidence from Uganda
Kjetil Bjorvatn, Denise Ferris, Selim Gulesci, Arne Nasgowitz, Vincent Somville, Lore Vandewalle
The Earnings and Labor Supply of U.S. Physicians
Joshua D Gottlieb, Maria Polyakova, Kevin Rinz, Hugh Shiplett, Victoria Udalova