Optimal tax progressivity in unionised labour markets
CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis
CPB - The Hague
2009
41 p.
collective bargaining ; labour market ; taxation ; unemployment
CPB Discussion Paper
129
Public finance and taxation
English
Bibliogr.
978-90-5833-417-6
"In labour markets with collective wage bargaining higher progressivity of the labour income tax creates a trade-off. On the one hand, wages are lowered and unemployment decreases, on the other hand, the individual labour supply decision is distorted at the hours-of-work margin. The optimal level of tax progressivity within this trade-off is determined using a numerical general equilibrium model with imperfect competition on the goods market, collective wage bargaining and a labour-supply module calibrated to empirically plausible elasticity values. The model is calibrated to macroeconomic and institutional parameters of both the OECD average and a number of individual OECD countries. In most cases the optimal degree of tax progressivity is below the actual level. A decomposition approach shows that the optimal level is increased by high unemployment and by the general tax level."
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