A new paradigm for transport economists has been established: revenues of a welfare-maximising road tax should be employed to reduce the level of a distortionary income tax. An essential assumption to reach this conclusion is that the number of workdays is optimally chosen, whereas daily workhours are fixed, implying that given a road tax, workers may only reduce their commuting costs by reducing total labour supply. However, a labour supply model which also allows for optimally chosen daily hours implies that commuting costs increase daily hours, whereas the effect on total labour supply is ambiguous. This paper addresses this issue empirically by analysing the relationship between labour supply patterns and commuting distance using the so...
In this paper we study optimal congestion pricing in a wage bargaining model. We first show that, co...
In Europe, the preferential tax treatment of company cars implies that many employees receive a comp...
This paper explores the interactions between taxes on work-related traffic congestion and pre-existi...
According to theory, road pricing may reduce welfare when labour supply is negatively distorted by a...
We examine the effect of commuting distance on workers' labour supply patterns, distinguishing betwe...
Transportation economists apply different labor supply models when studying anti-congestion policy: ...
Using administrative employer-employee data from Germany, I exploit two reductions of tax breaks for...
The geographical distance between home and workplace is present and increases within modern society....
We hypothesise, and test for, a negative effect of the length of the worker's commute on worker's pr...
Many previous studies of transport tax reform have explicitly or implicitly assumed that the reform ...
9 pages, 3 figuresInternational audienceWe discuss the distribution of commuting distances and its r...
The average worker in Britain spends 139 h/year commuting—the equivalent of 19 standard working days...
The average worker in Britain spends 139 h/year commuting - the equivalent of 19 standard working da...
The purpose of this paper is to study optimal congestion taxes in a time allocation framework. This ...
The transport and urban economics literature applies different labor supply approaches when studying...
In this paper we study optimal congestion pricing in a wage bargaining model. We first show that, co...
In Europe, the preferential tax treatment of company cars implies that many employees receive a comp...
This paper explores the interactions between taxes on work-related traffic congestion and pre-existi...
According to theory, road pricing may reduce welfare when labour supply is negatively distorted by a...
We examine the effect of commuting distance on workers' labour supply patterns, distinguishing betwe...
Transportation economists apply different labor supply models when studying anti-congestion policy: ...
Using administrative employer-employee data from Germany, I exploit two reductions of tax breaks for...
The geographical distance between home and workplace is present and increases within modern society....
We hypothesise, and test for, a negative effect of the length of the worker's commute on worker's pr...
Many previous studies of transport tax reform have explicitly or implicitly assumed that the reform ...
9 pages, 3 figuresInternational audienceWe discuss the distribution of commuting distances and its r...
The average worker in Britain spends 139 h/year commuting—the equivalent of 19 standard working days...
The average worker in Britain spends 139 h/year commuting - the equivalent of 19 standard working da...
The purpose of this paper is to study optimal congestion taxes in a time allocation framework. This ...
The transport and urban economics literature applies different labor supply approaches when studying...
In this paper we study optimal congestion pricing in a wage bargaining model. We first show that, co...
In Europe, the preferential tax treatment of company cars implies that many employees receive a comp...
This paper explores the interactions between taxes on work-related traffic congestion and pre-existi...