0000000000598216

AUTHOR

Laszlo Goerke

showing 6 related works from this author

Tax Liability and Tax Evasion in a Competitive Labor Market

2005

In a competitive labor market, a change in the legal incidence of a tax on labor will not alter employment if tax obligations are fulfilled. However, this irrelevance result may no longer apply if taxes can be evaded. In particular, a shift from payroll to income taxes will lower employment. This will be the case if workers exhibit constant absolute risk aversion, have a utility function, which is strongly separable in income and the disutility from working, and the penalty for evasion is not proportional to the amount of taxes evaded. Accordingly, tax evasion opportunities can make the legal incidence of a tax on labor an important determinant of its economic incidence.

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsSociology and Political ScienceTax deferralDirect taxTax reformValue-added taxTax creditAd valorem taxEconomicsState income taxhealth care economics and organizationsFinanceIndirect taxJournal of Public Economic Theory
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Tax evasion, tax progression, and efficiency wages

2004

Abstract More progressive taxes raise employment in imperfect labour markets. However, this prediction is not robust. For example, any employment effect vanishes in a constant profit efficiency wage economy. It is demonstrated that tax evasion opportunities can re-establish positive employment effects of higher tax progression.

Economics and EconometricsDouble taxationLabour economicsValue-added taxTax creditAd valorem taxState income taxEconomicsDeferred taxTax reformFinanceIndirect taxEconomics Letters
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Tax Evasion and Tax Progressivity

2003

In a pure tax evasion framework in which the monetary penalty is a function of the evaded tax, more progressive income taxes will reduce tax evasion if income has to be declared. However, if tax payments have to be declared, higher tax progressivity will have no effects. Thus, the relationship between tax evasion and tax progressivity depends on whether income or taxes have to be divulged to tax authorities. If the fine is a function of undeclared income, higher tax progressivity will always raise evasion.

Economics and EconometricsDouble taxation050208 financePublic AdministrationPublic economicsDirect tax05 social sciencesTax reformTax avoidanceValue-added taxAd valorem tax0502 economics and businessState income taxEconomics050207 economicsFinanceIndirect taxPublic Finance Review
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Norm-Based Trade Union Membership: Evidence for Germany

2004

AbstractIn the absence of closed shops and discriminatory wage policies, union membership can be explained by the existence of social norms.We describe a model, incorporating institutional features of the German labour market, which explicitly allows for social custom effects in the determination of union membership. Using panel data for Germany, we find evidence for according effects which restrict freeriding. The impact of social norms tends to increase with net union density. Hence, observed reductions in the demand for union membership can weaken the impact of a norm and accentuate the free-rider problem.

Economics and EconometricsLabour economics050208 financeSocial custommedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesWageUnion densitylanguage.human_languageGermanrestrict0502 economics and businessTrade unionlanguageEconomicsNorm (social)050207 economicsPanel datamedia_commonGerman Economic Review
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Income Tax Evasion in a Unionised Labour Market

2003

Labour market outcomes can depend on tax evasion since the returns from working are affected by the amount of taxes paid. In this paper, unionised workers are assumed to select the income which they declare. The rational trade union takes this decision into account. It is shown that the employment effects of a linear income tax are not altered qualitatively by tax evasion if the fine for evasion is a function only of the evaded tax. Moreover, the consequences of changes in the tax enforcement system are determined by the ability to choose evasion activities optimally. The existence of unrestricted tax evasion opportunities lowers wages.

Labour economicsIncome taxTrade unionEconomicsTax evasionEnforcementEvasion (ethics)General Economics Econometrics and Financehealth care economics and organizationsAustralian Economic Papers
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Earnings-related unemployment benefits and unemployment

2003

Abstract We show that a stronger earnings relationship of unemployment compensation reduces wages and increases employment in an economy in which wages are determined by a trade union that maximises the rent from unionisation. The opposite result applies for a utilitarian union. Using manufacturing and non-manufacturing data for 16 OECD countries, estimates suggest that a 10% increase in the earnings relationship is associated with a 1.9% fall in manufacturing wages, a 0.6% reduction in non-manufacturing wages and a 7.3% reduction in unemployment.

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsFull employmentEarningsmedia_common.quotation_subjectTrade unionUnemploymentEconomicsOecd countriesPanel datamedia_commonEconomic Systems
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