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Visibility of social security contributions and employment

Visibility of social security contributions and employment. Iñigo Iturbe-Ormaetxe Universidad de Alicante PET10, Istanbul, June 2010. Goal of the paper. In most countries social security contributions are split between workers and firms Average total contribution for the OECD is 23.8%

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Visibility of social security contributions and employment

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  1. Visibility of social security contributions and employment Iñigo Iturbe-Ormaetxe Universidad de Alicante PET10, Istanbul, June 2010

  2. Goal of the paper • In most countries social security contributions are split between workers and firms • Average total contribution for the OECD is 23.8% • Average firm contribution is 15.2%, and average worker contribution is 8.6%. An split of around 64-36 PET2010, Istanbul

  3. PET2010, Istanbul

  4. Economic incidence • Without minimum wages, standard economic analysis predicts that it does not matter who nominally pays the tax (statutory incidence) • Economic incidence depends only on the elasticities of labor demand and labor supply PET2010, Istanbul

  5. Goal of the paper-2 • Suppose, in particular, that we need to raise contributions. We know this will hurt employment • However, it is irrelevant whether we raise employers contributions or employees contributions, as long as the change is the same • Additionally, any change in how contributions are split has no effect on employment or on the cost of labor PET2010, Istanbul

  6. Goal of the paper-3 • I depart from standard analysis in two directions: • First, I consider that workers perceive some linkage between contributions and future benefits (as in Summers 1989) • Second, I assume that workers value more contributions paid by themselves than those paid by the firm. The reason is that the latter are less “visible” for workers PET2010, Istanbul

  7. Results • Under the two assumptions above, I find that changes in contributions paid by firms have more impact on employment than similar changes in contributions paid by workers • As a consequence any change in how contributions are split, that keeps constant total contributions while reducing the share of the firm, has a positive effect on employment PET2010, Istanbul

  8. Results-2 • Intuition: firms perceive contributions as pure taxes while workers perceive some linkage with future benefits • Reducing the share of firms is positive for employment • Increasing the share of workers is negative for employment. However, this raises the “visible” part of contributions, partially offsetting this negative effect PET2010, Istanbul

  9. Results-3 • Overall, the effect on employment is positive • I do not need minimum wages to get this result • Another interesting result is that policy changes that increase visibility of contributions have always a positive effect on employment PET2010, Istanbul

  10. Competitive equilibrium • Labor demand is D(w(1+F)), where F is the contribution rate paid by firms • Labor supply is S(w), where:  = 1- W + (W+F) • Here W is worker’s contribution rate and total tax rate is  = F + W • The parameter   0 captures the strength of the linkage workers perceive between contributions and benefits PET2010, Istanbul

  11. Competitive equilibrium • If  = 0, workers perceive all contributions as pure taxes • If benefits are strictly proportional to contributions, all workers will have similar values of  • If the system is progressive, low-skilled workers will have higher values of  than high-skilled workers PET2010, Istanbul

  12. Competitive equilibrium • Recall that  = 1- W + (W+F) • The parameter   [0,1] represents how “visible” are contributions paid by employers • If  = 1 they are equally visible than those paid by workers themselves • If  = 0 they are not visible at all PET2010, Istanbul

  13. Boeri, Börsch-Supan, Tabellini PET2010, Istanbul

  14. Visibility • My interpretation is that workers have little information about contributions paid by firms • Or, at least, they are more myopic with respect to contributions paid by firms • This is what I need to derive my results PET2010, Istanbul

  15. Analysis • I analyze the effect of changes in F and W on employment (L) • To do this, I compute dlnL/dF and dlnL/dW. Both are negative • However, the size of dlnL/dF is larger than the one of dlnL/dW as long as: PET2010, Istanbul

  16. Analysis-2 • Assume that  = 20% • If  = 0.5, the condition is  < 0.8 • If  = 0.75, the condition is  < 0.93 • If  = 1, the condition is  < 1 • If the system is progressive, the condition is more likely to hold for low-skilled workers (high  and low ) PET2010, Istanbul

  17. Illustration of the condition  1 Here ’ >  ’/(1+’) /(1+)  PET2010, Istanbul

  18. Analysis-3 • Next I consider a policy change such that dF = -dW < 0 • Total contributions  remain unchanged • Under the above condition, this change has a positive effect on employment • It also reduces total labor costs for firms PET2010, Istanbul

  19. Policy change S(w) S(w) wF ww D(w) D(w(1+F)) PET2010, Istanbul

  20. Policy change-2 S(’w) S(w) S(w) wF wF’ ww’ ww D(w) D(w(1+F)) D(w(1+F’)) PET2010, Istanbul

  21. Increasing visibility • Government could require firms to provide detailed information about contributions • In Spain, for example, this information IS NOT in the monthly wage report (pay slip) • As long as  > 0, this has always a positive effect on employment • It also reduces labor costs PET2010, Istanbul

  22. Increasing visibility S(w) S(w) wF ww D(w) D(w(1+F)) L PET2010, Istanbul

  23. Increasing visibility S(’w) S(w) S(w) wF wF’ ww’ ww D(w) D(w(1+F)) L L’ PET2010, Istanbul

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