We extend the scarce evidence on the labor supply in post-transition countries by estimating the wage elasticity of labor force participation in the Czech Republic. Using household income survey data, we find that a one-percent rise in the gross wage increases the probability of working by 0.16 and 0.02 percentage points for women and men, respectively. Taking into account the tax and benefit system, these semi-elasticities fall to 0.06 for women and 0.01 for men. We interpret the difference between the estimates from the two specifications as a summary measure of the welfare system disincentives. The estimated wage elasticities lie at the lower end of the range of values reported for mature market economies. This finding is consistent with...
The project drew on an extensive firm-level sample of employees to describe in detail the recent evo...
Wage and income surveys covering the period 1989-1999 are used to display changes in inequality of e...
In this volume we investigate the macroeconomic aspects of labour market behaviour and its microfoun...
We extend the scarce evidence on labor supply in post-transition countries by estimating the wage el...
Post-communist labor markets provide an interesting laboratory since unemployment rates grew from ze...
This research uses four micro-data sets to examine differences in married women's labor force partic...
This study highlights the factors that influence individual hours of work decision in fi ve transiti...
This paper studies effects of unemployment and labour market programmes on real wages in the Czech a...
Using large firm-level data sets from the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary, we show that...
We analyse women?s weekly probabilities of leaving unemployment in the Czech and Slovak Republics (C...
Statistical income surveys are used to document systemic changes in distribution and redistribution ...
The Czech labour market performance in early 1990s has widely been regarded as a success story. In p...
Under communism, workers had their wages set according to a centrally-determined wage grid. In this...
We estimate returns to human capital during communism and the transition using data on 2,284 men in ...
This paper presents a comparative analysis of employment and wage behavior of firms in the Czech Rep...
The project drew on an extensive firm-level sample of employees to describe in detail the recent evo...
Wage and income surveys covering the period 1989-1999 are used to display changes in inequality of e...
In this volume we investigate the macroeconomic aspects of labour market behaviour and its microfoun...
We extend the scarce evidence on labor supply in post-transition countries by estimating the wage el...
Post-communist labor markets provide an interesting laboratory since unemployment rates grew from ze...
This research uses four micro-data sets to examine differences in married women's labor force partic...
This study highlights the factors that influence individual hours of work decision in fi ve transiti...
This paper studies effects of unemployment and labour market programmes on real wages in the Czech a...
Using large firm-level data sets from the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary, we show that...
We analyse women?s weekly probabilities of leaving unemployment in the Czech and Slovak Republics (C...
Statistical income surveys are used to document systemic changes in distribution and redistribution ...
The Czech labour market performance in early 1990s has widely been regarded as a success story. In p...
Under communism, workers had their wages set according to a centrally-determined wage grid. In this...
We estimate returns to human capital during communism and the transition using data on 2,284 men in ...
This paper presents a comparative analysis of employment and wage behavior of firms in the Czech Rep...
The project drew on an extensive firm-level sample of employees to describe in detail the recent evo...
Wage and income surveys covering the period 1989-1999 are used to display changes in inequality of e...
In this volume we investigate the macroeconomic aspects of labour market behaviour and its microfoun...