Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply

My dissertation consists of three essays on labor supply responses, along the extensive margin (participation into the labor force) and along the intensive margin (intensity of work on the job). The first two essays focus on the labor supply responsiveness of single women with children to taxation a...

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Main Author: Zhang, Yonghui
Other Authors: Economics, Science
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76670
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-766702020-09-29T05:35:35Z Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply Zhang, Yonghui Economics, Science Tideman, Thorwald Nicolaus Plassman, Florenz Cothren, Richard D. Ge, Suqin Tsang, Kwok Ping Labor Supply Earned Income Tax Credit Dynamic Stochastic Discrete Choice Model Simulated Method of Moments Single Mothers Multinomial Logit Frisch Elasticity My dissertation consists of three essays on labor supply responses, along the extensive margin (participation into the labor force) and along the intensive margin (intensity of work on the job). The first two essays focus on the labor supply responsiveness of single women with children to taxation and welfare programs. The third essay investigates the effects of marriage, the wage rate, and the associated tax rate on men's labor supply. In the first essay, to avoid bias from the fact that labor supply outcomes are being driven by self-selection, I build a dynamic stochastic discrete choice model to investigate the long run effects of the earned income tax credit and welfare policies on single mothers' labor supply. Simulated method of moments is used to estimate parameters of this dynamic model, based on March CPS data files from 1964 to 2013. I compare the performance of the dynamic stochastic discrete choice model, a static model, and a reduced-form model. My analysis concludes that the dynamic stochastic discrete choice model captures the simultaneous impact of the state variables on the predicted employment decision. My study provides evidence of the long-run positive effect of public policy on low income families in a life-cycle setting. This essay also emphasizes the importance of education in increasing single mothers' labor supply. The second essay is designed to identify factors that help single mothers leave TANF within a short span of time. I find strong evidence for the importance of child support assistance to single mothers' success in exiting TANF with a job. I uncover evidence that work-related activities do not induce TANF participants to leave within a short span of time. My analysis also suggests that health issues significantly limit the ability of single mothers to exit TANF. In the third essay, the main research question is how marital status affects the elasticity of the labor supply of males with respect to wages and taxes, in a life-cycle setting. A dynamic panel data model, which extends the literature on dynamic labor supply, indicates that the elasticity of men's labor supply with respect to wages and taxes is affected by marital status. The empirical results using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) data show that men who are continuously married to the same wife have a lower average Frisch elasticity than others. Ph. D. 2017-03-22T06:00:25Z 2017-03-22T06:00:25Z 2015-09-28 Dissertation vt_gsexam:6418 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76670 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Labor Supply
Earned Income Tax Credit
Dynamic Stochastic Discrete Choice Model
Simulated Method of Moments
Single Mothers
Multinomial Logit
Frisch Elasticity
spellingShingle Labor Supply
Earned Income Tax Credit
Dynamic Stochastic Discrete Choice Model
Simulated Method of Moments
Single Mothers
Multinomial Logit
Frisch Elasticity
Zhang, Yonghui
Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply
description My dissertation consists of three essays on labor supply responses, along the extensive margin (participation into the labor force) and along the intensive margin (intensity of work on the job). The first two essays focus on the labor supply responsiveness of single women with children to taxation and welfare programs. The third essay investigates the effects of marriage, the wage rate, and the associated tax rate on men's labor supply. In the first essay, to avoid bias from the fact that labor supply outcomes are being driven by self-selection, I build a dynamic stochastic discrete choice model to investigate the long run effects of the earned income tax credit and welfare policies on single mothers' labor supply. Simulated method of moments is used to estimate parameters of this dynamic model, based on March CPS data files from 1964 to 2013. I compare the performance of the dynamic stochastic discrete choice model, a static model, and a reduced-form model. My analysis concludes that the dynamic stochastic discrete choice model captures the simultaneous impact of the state variables on the predicted employment decision. My study provides evidence of the long-run positive effect of public policy on low income families in a life-cycle setting. This essay also emphasizes the importance of education in increasing single mothers' labor supply. The second essay is designed to identify factors that help single mothers leave TANF within a short span of time. I find strong evidence for the importance of child support assistance to single mothers' success in exiting TANF with a job. I uncover evidence that work-related activities do not induce TANF participants to leave within a short span of time. My analysis also suggests that health issues significantly limit the ability of single mothers to exit TANF. In the third essay, the main research question is how marital status affects the elasticity of the labor supply of males with respect to wages and taxes, in a life-cycle setting. A dynamic panel data model, which extends the literature on dynamic labor supply, indicates that the elasticity of men's labor supply with respect to wages and taxes is affected by marital status. The empirical results using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) data show that men who are continuously married to the same wife have a lower average Frisch elasticity than others. === Ph. D.
author2 Economics, Science
author_facet Economics, Science
Zhang, Yonghui
author Zhang, Yonghui
author_sort Zhang, Yonghui
title Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply
title_short Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply
title_full Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply
title_fullStr Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply
title_full_unstemmed Essays on Taxation, Marriage, and Labor Supply
title_sort essays on taxation, marriage, and labor supply
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76670
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangyonghui essaysontaxationmarriageandlaborsupply
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