Abstract: |
Earning an income is probably the best way of avoiding poverty and social
exclusion, hence the recent trend of promoting employment through in-work
transfers in OECD countries. Yet, the relative consensus on the need for
‘making work pay’ policies is muddied by a number of concerns relative to the
design of the reforms and the treatment of the family dimension. Relying on
EUROMOD, a EU-15 integrated tax-benefit microsimulation software, we simulate
two types of in-work benefits. The first one is means-tested on family income,
in the fashion of the British Working Family Tax Credit, while the second is a
purely individualized policy. Both reforms are built on the same cost basis
(after behavioral responses) and simulated in three European countries which
experience severe poverty traps, namely Finland, France and Germany. The
potential labor supply responses to the reforms and the subsequent
redistributive impacts are assessed for each country using a structural
discrete-choice model. We compare how both reforms achieve poverty reduction
and social inclusion (measured as the number of transitions into activity).
All three countries present different initial conditions, including
institutional environment, existing tax-benefit systems and distribution of
incomes and wages. These sources of heterogeneity are exploited together with
different labor supply sensitivities to explain the cross-country differences
in the impact of the reforms. |