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THE IMPACT OF FISCAL POLICY ON LABOR SUPPLY AND EDUCATION IN AN ECONOMY WITH HOUSEHOLD AND MARKET PRODUCTION

Alison Lee Booth () and Melvyn Glyn Coles

CAMA Working Papers from Australian National University, Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis

Abstract: This paper considers optimal educational investment and labour supply with increasing returns to scale in the earnings function. In so doing we develop the work of Rosen (1983), who first highlighted the increasing returns argument that arises because private returns to human capital investment are increasing in subsequent utilization rates. We demonstrate that increasing returns generates task specialisation - individuals choose to become either home specialists or work specialists. With heterogeneous workers, we show for certain types, that a tax on labour income leads to large, non-marginal substitution effects; i.e. those with a comparative advantage in home production are driven out of the market sector. Tax deadweight losses are consequently large. Consistent with the theory, our empirical results, using a cross-country panel, find that gender differences in labour supply responses to tax policy can play an important role in explaining differences in aggregate labour supply across countries.

JEL-codes: H24 J13 J24 J31 J42 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-edu and nep-pbe
Date: Written 2007-03
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http://cama.anu.edu.au/Working%20Papers/Papers/2007/Booth_Coles_82007.pdf (application/pdf)

Related works:
Working Paper: The Impact of Fiscal Policy on Labour Supply and Education in an Economy with Household and Market Production (2007) Downloads
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