Lifecycle consistent estimation of effect of taxes on female labor supply in the US: evidence from panel data
Anil Kumar
No 504, Working Papers from Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Abstract:
Very few existing studies have estimated female labor supply elasticities using a U.S. panel data set, though cross-sectional studies abound. Also, most existing studies have modeled female labor supply in the U.S. in a static framework. I make an attempt to fill the gap in this literature, by estimating a lifecycle-consistent specification with taxes, in a limited dependent variable framework, on a panel of married females from the PSID. Both parametric random effects and semiparametric fixed effects methods are applied. The estimate of compensated elasticity for females in the sample is 0.63 (with a standard error of 0.14). These estimates are fairly robust to the choice of both random effects and semiparametric fixed effect estimators and also to the choice of instruments for the endogenous net wage and virtual full income. I estimate exact deadweight loss from taxes and find that deadweight loss from a 20 percent increase in the marginal tax rate is about 18 percent of tax revenue collected, evaluated at the sample mean.
Keywords: Labor supply; Women - Employment; Wages (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 49 pages
Date: 2005
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-pbe
Note: Published as: Kumar, Anil (2016), "Lifecycle-Consistent Female Labor Supply with Nonlinear Taxes: Evidence from Unobserved Effects Panel Data Models with Censoring, Selection and Endogeneity," Review of Economics of the Household 14 (1): 207-229.
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