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References for Do payroll tax cuts boost formal jobs in developing countries?
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Further reading
- Bell, B., Nickell, S. "Would cutting payroll taxes on the unskilled have a significant impact on unemployment?" In: Snower, D. J., de la Dehesa, G. (eds). Unemployment Policy: Government Options for the Labour Market. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
- Bird, R., Smart, M. "Financing social expenditures in developing countries: Payroll or value-added taxes?" In: Frolich, M., Kaplan, D., Pages, C., Rigolini, J., Robalino, D. (eds). Social Insurance, Informality and Labor Markets: How to Protect Workers while Creating Good Jobs. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.
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Key references
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Alaimo, V., Bosch, M., Kaplan, D., Pagés, C., Ripani, L. Jobs for
Growth. Washington DC: InterAmerican Development Bank, 2015. Key reference: [1]
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Summers, L. H. "Some simple
economics of mandated benefits" American Economic
Review, Papers and Proceedings 79:2 (1989): 177–183. Key reference: [2]
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Antón, A. "The effect of
payroll taxes on employment and wages under high
informality" IZA Journal of
Labor and Development 3 (2014): 20. Key reference: [3]
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Heckman, J., Pagés, C. Law and
Employment: Evidence from Latin America and the
Caribbean. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press/NBER, 2004. Key reference: [4]
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Lehmann, H., Muravyev, A. "Labor market
institutions and informality in transition and Latin American
countries" In: Frolich, M., Kaplan, D., Pages, C., Rigolini, J., Robalino, D. (eds). Social Insurance,
Informality and Labor Markets: How to Protect Workers while
Creating Good Jobs. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. Key reference: [5]
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Gruber, J. "The incidence of
payroll taxation evidence from Chile" Journal of Labor
Economics 15:S3 (1997): S72–S101. Key reference: [6]
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Kugler, A., Kugler, M. "Labor market
effects of payroll taxes in developing countries: Evidence from
Colombia" Economic
Development and Cultural Change 57 (2009): 2. Key reference: [7]
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Cruces, G., Galiani, S., Kidyba, S. "Payroll taxes,
wages and employment: Identification through policy
changes" Labour
Economics 17:4 (2010): 743–749. Key reference: [8]
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Betcherman, G., Meltem, D., Pagés, C. "Do employment
subsidies work? Evidence from regionally targeted subsidies in
Turkey" Labour
Economics 17:4 (2010): 710–722. Key reference: [9]
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Egebark, J., Kaunitz, N. Do Payroll Tax
Cuts Raise Youth Employment? IFAU Working
Paper No.No. 27, 2013. Key reference: [10]
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Bunel, M., L’Horty, Y. "The effects of
reduced social security contributions on employment: An
evaluation of the 2003 French reform" Fiscal Studies.
The Journal of Applied Public Economics 33:3 (2012): 371–398. Key reference: [11]
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Antón, A., Hernandez, F., Levy, S. The End of
Informality in Mexico: Fiscal Reform for Universal Social
Insurance. Washington, DC: InterAmerican Development Bank, 2012. Key reference: [12]
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Levy, S. Good Intentions,
Bad Outcomes: Social Policy Informality and Economic Growth in
Mexico. Washington DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2008. Key reference: [13]
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Alaimo, V., Bosch, M., Kaplan, D., Pagés, C., Ripani, L. Jobs for
Growth. Washington DC: InterAmerican Development Bank, 2015.
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Additional References
- Benmarker, H., Mellander, E., Öckert, B. "Do regional payroll tax reductions boost employment?" Labour Economics 16 (2009): 480–489.
- Gruber, J. "The incidence of mandated maternity benefits" American Economic Review 84 (1994): 622–641.
- ILO World Employment and Social Outlook: Trends 2016. Geneva: ILO, 2016.
- Korkeamäki, O., Uusitalo, R. "Employment and wage effects of a payroll tax: Evidence from a regional experiment" International Tax and Public Finance 16 (2009): 753–772.
- Stokke, H. Regional Payroll Tax Cuts and Individual Wages: Heterogeneous effects across Education Groups Norwegian University of Science and Technology Working Paper No.Series No. 7, 2015.