Back to issue
Cover of: Is Tax Progression Good for Employment? Efficiency Wages and the Role of the Prereform Tax Structure
Ronnie Schöb, Erkki Koskela

Is Tax Progression Good for Employment? Efficiency Wages and the Role of the Prereform Tax Structure

Section: Articles
Volume 65 (2009) / Issue 1, pp. 51-72 (22)
Published 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/001522109X444206
  • article PDF
  • available
  • 10.1628/001522109X444206
Summary
Within an efficiency-wage framework, we study the effects of two revenue-neutral tax reforms that change the progressivity of the labor tax system. A revenue-neutral increase in both the wage tax and the tax exemption and a revenue-neutral change in the composition of labor taxation towards the tax with the smaller base will lead to the same results: they moderate wages, workers' effort, effective labor input, and aggregate output. Whether employment rises or falls, however, depends in both reforms on the magnitude of the prereform total tax wedge. We show that this ambiguity stems from the effect tax progression has on the marginal revenue changes of tax and tax exemption changes. This budgetary effect determines the result in the same way in both tax reforms and turns out to be the crucial force in determining the effect the degree of tax progressivity has on employment.