A Quantitative Evaluation of Payroll Tax Subsidies For Low-Wage Workers: An Equilibrium Search Approach
Article dans une revue: Phelps (1994) presented the case for a low-wage subsidy policy. Since the mid-1990s, France has experimented with this strategy. This paper evaluates the e®ect of this policy on employment and also on output and welfare. We construct an equilibrium search model incorporating wage posting and specific human capital investment, where unemployment and the distribution of both wages and productivity are endogenous. We estimate this model using French data. Numerical simulations show that the prevailing minimum wage allows a high production level to be reached by increasing training investment, even though the optimal minimum wage is lower. We show that payroll tax subsidies enhance welfare more than a reduction in the minimum wage when they are spread over a large range of wages in order to avoid specialization in low productivity jobs.
Auteur(s)
Arnaud Chéron, Jean-Olivier Hairault, François Langot
Revue
- Journal of Public Economics
Date de publication
- 2008
Mots-clés
- Employment
- Productivité
- Equilibrium search
- Labor costs
Pages
- 817-843
URL de la notice HAL
Version
- 1
Volume
- 92