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References for Do in-work benefits work for low-skilled workers?
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Further reading
- Immervol, H. Reforming the Benefit System to “Make Work Pay”: Options and Priorities in a Weak Labour Market IZA Policy Paper No.50, 2012.
- Neumark, D. "Spurring job creation in response to severe recessions: Reconsidering hiring credits" Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 32:1 (2013): 142–171.
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Key references
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Saez, E. "Optimal income
transfer programs: Intensive versus extensive labor supply
responses" Quarterly Journal
of Economics 117:3 (2002): 1039–1073. Key reference: [1]
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Chetty, R., Friedman, J. N., Saez, E. "Using differences
in knowledge across neighborhoods to uncover the impacts of the
EITC on earnings" American Economic
Review 103:7 (2013): 2683–2721. Key reference: [2]
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Eissa, N., Liebman, J. B. "Labor supply
response to the Earned Income Tax Credit" Quarterly Journal
of Economics 112:2 (1996): 605–637. Key reference: [3]
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Brewer, M., Duncan, A., Shepard, A., Suarez, M. J. "Did working
families’ tax credit work? The impact of in-work support on
labour supply in Great Britain" Labour
Economics 13 (2006): 699–720. Key reference: [4]
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Bettendorf, L. J. H., Folmer, K., Jongen, E. L. W. "The dog that did
not bark: The EITC for single mothers in the Netherlands" Journal of Public
Economics 119 (2014): 49–60. Key reference: [5]
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Eissa, N., Hoynes, H. W. "Behavioral
responses to taxes: Lessons from the EITC on labor
supply" Tax Policy and the
Economy 20 (2006): 73–110. Key reference: [6]
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Gregg, P., Harkness, S., Smith, S. "Welfare reform and
lone parents in the UK" The Economic
Journal 119 (2009): F38–F65. Key reference: [7]
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Blundell, R., Shephard, A. "Employment, hours
of work and the optimal taxation of low-income families" Review of Economic
Studies 79 (2012): 481–510. Key reference: [8]
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Card, D., Hyslop, D. R. "The dynamic
effects of an earnings subsidy for long-term welfare recipients:
Evidence from the self sufficiency project applicant
experiment" Journal of
Econometrics 153 (2009): 1–20. Key reference: [9]
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Dorsett, R. "The effect of
temporary in-work support on employment retention: Evidence from
a field experiment" Labour
Economics 31 (2014): 61–71. Key reference: [10]
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Nichols, A., Rothstein, J. "The earned income
tax credit (EITC)" In: Moffitt, R. A. (ed). Economics of
Means-Tested Transfer Programs in the United States, Vol. II. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, forthcoming. Key reference: [11]
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Dorsett, R., Oswald, A. J. Human Well-Being
and In-Work Benefits: A Randomized Control Trial Warwick
Working Paper
Series No.182, 2014-03. Key reference: [12]
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Averett, S., Wang, Y. The Effects of the
Earned Income Tax Credit on Children’s Health, Quality of Home
Environment, and Non-Cognitive Skills IZA Discussion
Paper No.9173, 2015-07. Key reference: [13]
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Saez, E. "Optimal income
transfer programs: Intensive versus extensive labor supply
responses" Quarterly Journal
of Economics 117:3 (2002): 1039–1073.
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Additional References
- Bargain, O., Caliendo, M., Haan, P., Orsini, K. "Making work pay in a rationed labor market" Journal of Population Economics 23:1 (2010): 323–351.
- Bhargava, S., Manoli, D. "Why are benefits left on the table? Assessing the role of information, complexity, and stigma on take-up with an IRS field experiment" American Economic Review 105:11 (2015): 3489-3529.
- Blundell, R. "Tax policy reform: The role of empirical evidence" Journal of the European Economic Association 10:1 (2012): 43-77.
- Dagsvik, J., Zhiyang, J., Orsini, K., Van Camp, G. "Subsidies to low-skilled workers’ social security contributions: The case of Belgium" Empirical Economics 40:3 (2011): 779-806.
- Heckman, J. J., Lochner, L., Cossa, R. "Learning-by-doing versus on-the-job training: Using variation induced by the EITC to distinguish between models of skill formation" In: Phelps, E. S. (ed). Designing Inclusion: Tools to Raise Low-end Pay and Employment in Private Enterprise. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
- Hoynes, H. W., Patel, A. J. Effective Policy for Reducing Inequality? The Earned Income Tax Credit and the Distribution of Income NBER Working Paper No.21340, 2015-07.
- Francesconi, M., van der Klaauw, W. "The socioeconomic consequences of ‘in-work’ benefit reform for British lone mothers" The Journal of Human Resources 42:1 (2007): 1–31.
- Kolm, A. S., Tonin, M. "Benefits conditional on work and the Nordic model" Journal of Public Economics 127 (2015): 115–126.
- Lehmann, E., Jacquet, L., Van der Linden, B. "Optimal redistributive taxation with both extensive and intensive responses" Journal of Economic Theory 148 (2013): 1770–1805.
- Stancanelli, E. G. F. "Evaluating the impact of the French tax credit on the employment rate of women" Journal of Public Economics 92:10-11 (2008): 2036–2047.