This article identifies the part‐time wage effect, using hours variation caused by the social security rules. We show that work hours and wages drop sharply at ages 62 and 65. We argue that the hours decline causes the wage decline, resulting in a 25% wage penalty for men who cut their work week from 40 to 20 hours. However, we find little evidence for such an effect among women. We also show that models that fail to account for the joint determination of hours and wages will understate the labor supply response to a tax change by about 26%
Traditional economic research on the number of hours that one chooses to work depends largely on wag...
This work analyses working hours, childcare support, wage inequality and windfall gains. In Chapter ...
We use British panel data to investigate single women’s labor supply changes in response to three re...
The amount of time that people spend in paid work has a major influence on both individual earnings ...
Hundreds of papers have investigated how incentives and policies affect hours worked in the market. ...
This dissertation contributes to the understanding of employer-employee bargaining over hours of wor...
This paper provides evidence that hours of work are heavily influenced by the particular job which a...
A key question for Social Security reform is whether workers respond to the link on the margin betwe...
Major strands of recent macroeconomic theory hinge on the relation of workers' efforts to their wage...
This paper extends a standard intertemporal labor supply model to account for progressive taxation a...
To what extent do workers work more hours than they are paid for? The relationship between hours wor...
This thesis examines the theoretical and empirical predictions of the effects of reductions in hours...
The paper investigates whether a decrease in standard working time (the stipulated weekly working ti...
The paper investigates whether a decrease in standard working time (the stipulated weekly working t...
The Social Security earnings test, which currently applies to those ages 62-64, reduces immediate pa...
Traditional economic research on the number of hours that one chooses to work depends largely on wag...
This work analyses working hours, childcare support, wage inequality and windfall gains. In Chapter ...
We use British panel data to investigate single women’s labor supply changes in response to three re...
The amount of time that people spend in paid work has a major influence on both individual earnings ...
Hundreds of papers have investigated how incentives and policies affect hours worked in the market. ...
This dissertation contributes to the understanding of employer-employee bargaining over hours of wor...
This paper provides evidence that hours of work are heavily influenced by the particular job which a...
A key question for Social Security reform is whether workers respond to the link on the margin betwe...
Major strands of recent macroeconomic theory hinge on the relation of workers' efforts to their wage...
This paper extends a standard intertemporal labor supply model to account for progressive taxation a...
To what extent do workers work more hours than they are paid for? The relationship between hours wor...
This thesis examines the theoretical and empirical predictions of the effects of reductions in hours...
The paper investigates whether a decrease in standard working time (the stipulated weekly working ti...
The paper investigates whether a decrease in standard working time (the stipulated weekly working t...
The Social Security earnings test, which currently applies to those ages 62-64, reduces immediate pa...
Traditional economic research on the number of hours that one chooses to work depends largely on wag...
This work analyses working hours, childcare support, wage inequality and windfall gains. In Chapter ...
We use British panel data to investigate single women’s labor supply changes in response to three re...