In this paper we provide an overview of the literature relating labour supply to taxes and welfare benefits with a focus on presenting the empirical consensus. We begin with a basic continuous hours model, where individuals have completely free choice over their hours of work. We then consider fixed costs of work, the complications introduced by the benefits system, dynamic aspects of labour supply and we place the analysis in the context of the family. The key conclusion of this work is that in order to estimate the impact of tax reform and be able to generalise results, a structural approach that takes account of many of these issues is desirable. We then discuss the new Tax Responsiveness literature which uses the response of taxable income to the marginal tax rate as a summary statistic of the behavioural response to taxation...
H24 - Personal Income and Other Nonbusiness Taxes and Subsidies ; H31 - Household ; J22 - Time Allocation and Labor Supply ; Pay salaries and social benefits ; Individual Working Papers, Preprints ; United Kingdom