The Effect of Financial Incentives on Labour Supply: Evidence for Lone Parents from Microsimulation and Quasi-Experimental Evaluation*
The aim of this paper is to analyse the work incentive effects of a change in the Australian tax and transfer system on lone parents in July 2000. To evaluate the effect of the total change only, microsimulation can be used; but for a subgroup of lone parents, a few components of this policy change can be analysed through two alternative approaches - microsimulation and quasi-experimental evaluation. Both approaches examine the effects on the probability of employment and on average working hours. The results from microsimulation show that the combined changes introduced in July 2000 - involving reduced withdrawl rates, changed family payments and lower income tax rates - have increased labour supply for lone parents to a moderate extent. The estimated effect on average working hours when using microsimulation is very close to the effect estimated in a quasi-experimental approach using matching techniques to control for alternative influences. Copyright (c) 2008 The Authors Journal compilation (c) Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2008.
Year of publication: |
2008
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Authors: | Cai, Lixin ; Kalb, Guyonne ; Tseng, Yi-Ping ; Vu, Ha |
Published in: |
Fiscal Studies. - Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS). - Vol. 29.2008, 2, p. 285-325
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Publisher: |
Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) |
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