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When applied to the most responsive segments of
the labor market, tax policy can increase lifetime earnings and
employment
With aging populations and increased demands on
government revenue, countries need to boost employment and earnings. Tax
policy should focus on labor market entry and retirement. Those are the
points where labor supply is most responsive to tax incentives, which can
enhance the flow into work of people leaving school and women with young
children and can prolong employment among older workers. Human capital
policy has a complementary role in improving the payoff to work and ensuring
that earnings hold up longer over a lifetime.
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Unemployment insurance generosity should be
greater when unemployment is high—and vice versa
High unemployment and its social and economic
consequences have lent urgency to the question of how to improve
unemployment insurance in bad times without jeopardizing incentives to work
or public finances in the medium term. A possible solution is a rule-based
system that improves the generosity of unemployment insurance (replacement
rate, benefit duration, eligibility conditions) when unemployment is high
and reduces the generosity when it is low.
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Despite their theoretical benefits, flat taxes
have been tried only in a few formerly socialist countries
The potential economic outcomes resulting from a
flat rate of income tax have been the subject of an ongoing academic and
political debate. Many observers have suggested that the introduction of a
flat tax would be beneficial for a country’s economy, having a positive
influence on the labor market and the gross domestic product by enhancing
incentives to work, save, invest, and take risks. A flat tax also
significantly simplifies income taxation which increases tax compliance and
reduces tax planning, avoidance, and evasion. However, despite flat taxes
being on the political agenda in many countries, in practice their
implementation has mostly been restricted to the transition economy
countries of Eastern Europe. There is no one single flat tax system in place
in these countries though; one rate does not fit all.
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Two-tier wage bargaining fails to link wages
more closely to productivity and increases allocative inefficiencies
Debate over labor market flexibility focuses
mainly on firing costs, while largely ignoring wage determination and the
need for collective bargaining reform. Most countries affected by the euro
debt crisis have two-tier bargaining structures in which plant-level
bargaining supplements national or industrywide (multi-employer) agreements,
taking the pay agreement established at the multi-employer level as a floor.
Two-tier structures were intended to link pay more closely to productivity
and to allow wages to adjust downward during economic downturns, while
preventing excessive earning dispersion. However, these structures seem to
fail precisely on these grounds.
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Works councils can have a positive impact on firm
productivity, but only when specific conditions are in place
The German model of co-determination (Mitbestimmung) with works councils, in which workers are involved in the
management of a company, was a role model for other countries for many years. However,
since the 1990s the appeal of works councils has been declining, to the extent that now
even employees are sometimes voting against representation. This was recently
demonstrated by workers at the Volkswagen factory in Chattanooga, Tennessee, who voted
against union representation. An important question for firms and for policymakers is
whether the adoption of a works council has a positive influence on a firm’s
productivity and what the consequences are for a firm’s profits.
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Low status and a feeling of relative deprivation
are detrimental to health and happiness
People who are unable to maintain the same
standard of living as others around them experience a sense of relative
deprivation that has been shown to reduce feelings of well-being. Relative
deprivation reflects conditions of worsening relative poverty despite
striking reductions in absolute poverty. The effects of relative deprivation
explain why average happiness has been stagnant over time despite sharp
rises in income. Consumption taxes on status-seeking spending, along with
official and traditional sanctions on excess consumption and redistributive
policies may lessen the negative impact of relative deprivation on well-being.
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The success of policies raising the retirement
age depends on people’s responsiveness to changes in pension eligibility
Rising life expectancy and the growing fiscal
insolvency of public pension systems have prompted many developed countries
to raise the pension entitlement age. The success of such policies depends
on the responsiveness of individuals to such changes. Retirement has
increasingly become a decision made jointly by a couple rather than
individually by one partner. The empirical evidence indicates that almost a
third of dual-earner couples in Europe and the US coordinate their
retirement decision despite age differences between partners. This joint
determination of retirement has important implications for policies intended
to reduce the burden of pension costs.
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Wage-setting institutions narrow the gender pay
gap but may reduce employment for some women
There are large international differences in the
gender pay gap. In some developed countries in 2010–2012, women were close
to earnings parity with men, while in others large gaps remained. Since
women and men have different average levels of education and experience and
commonly work in different industries and occupations, multiple factors can
influence the gender pay gap. Among them are skill supply and demand,
unions, and minimum wages, which influence the economywide wage returns to
education, experience, and occupational wage differentials. Systems of wage
compression narrow the gender pay gap but may also lower demand for female
workers.
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Hiring subsidies can be a very cost-effective
way of helping the unemployed, but only when they are carefully targeted
Long-term unemployment can lead to skill
attrition and have detrimental effects on future employment prospects,
particularly following periods of economic crises when employment growth is
slow and cannot accommodate high levels of unemployment. Addressing this
problem requires the use of active labor market policies targeted at the
unemployed. In this context, hiring subsidies can provide temporary
incentives for firms to hire unemployed workers and, when sensibly targeted,
are a very cost-effective and efficient means of reducing unemployment,
during both periods of economic stability and recovery.
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Negotiating work rules at the firm level instead
of the industry level could lead to productivity gains
Because theoretical arguments differ on the
economic impact of collective bargaining agreements in developing countries,
empirical studies are needed to provide greater clarity. Recent empirical
studies for some Latin American countries have examined whether industry- or
firm-level collective bargaining is more advantageous for productivity
growth. Although differences in labor market institutions and in coverage of
collective bargaining agreements limit the generalizability of the findings,
studies suggest that work rules may raise productivity when negotiated at
the firm level but may sometimes lower productivity when negotiated at the
industry level.
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