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Comments on Anders Forslund: Den svenska jämviktsarbetslösheten – en översikt Bertil Holmlund Department of Economics Uppsala University. Outline. Theory The Swedish development Recent Swedish reforms Unemployment insurance The income tax system Other tax reforms Conclusions.
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Comments on Anders Forslund: Den svenska jämviktsarbetslösheten – en översikt Bertil Holmlund Department of Economics Uppsala University
Outline • Theory • The Swedish development • Recent Swedish reforms • Unemployment insurance • The income tax system • Other tax reforms • Conclusions
Can fiscal policy affect the equilibrium unemployment rate (NAIRU)? • Yes, in an open economy • NAIRU depends in general on the real exchange rate • Fiscal policy can influence the real exchange rate • A fiscal expansion can reduce NAIRU through a real appreciation
Equilibrium unemployment in an open economy Real exch. rate AD WS/PS Employment
A fiscal expansion in an open economy Real exch. rate AD WS/PS Employment
Does the real exchange rate matter for unemployment? • Direct evidence: Lindblad and Sellin (2003) • Indirect evidence: taxes and unemployment • The real exchange rate is part of the total wedge between real consumer and producer wages • A real appreciation is analogous to a tax cut
Long run considerations • Balanced trade? • Relevant for the very long run
Why did NAIRU double between 1990 and 1994? • Institutional changes? • Major tax reform 1991 (less progressive taxes) • Benefit cuts 1993 • Coordinated wage bargaining 1991 (Rehnbergavtalet) • Hard to identify major changes in institutions that can explain a sharp rise in NAIRU in the early 1990s • But NAIRU probably increased from the 1960s up to the early 1990s
Did NAIRU fall over the 1990s? • Benefit cuts took place • Imperfect wage-indexation of benefits • Temporary work agencies (1993) • Product market competition increased • Coordinated bargaining (Industriavtalet 1997) • So NAIRU probably fell over the 1990s
Recent reforms • Less generous unemployment insurance • In-work tax credits (Jobbskatteavdrag)
Compare benefit cuts and in-work tax credits (S) • Income after tax when unemployed: B • b=B/W is the replacement rate • Income after tax when employed: W+S • Standard model: • Unemployment depends on the replacement rate, b • Model with in-work tax credits, S : • Unemployment depends on (b – s); s=S/W • In-work tax credits and benefit cuts are approximately equivalent
Swedish reforms The change in the effective replacement rate has been substantial Should reduce equilibrium unemployment
Effects on labor force participation • Benefit cuts should reduce labor force participation • In-work tax credits should increase labor force participation
Other tax reforms with implications for employment • Property taxes: • Abolishment of the wealth tax • Cuts in real estate taxes • Effects on labor supply? • Reduced supply on the intensive margin • In-work tax credits have income effects
Income and substitution effectsH hours of work, W the wage, Y nonlabor income The last term is the marginal propensity to earn out of nonlabor income, mpe
Compute the hours response from exogenous tax cuts (income effects) Y is the income increase associated with the tax reduction WH is annual earnings mpe = -0.10 (Imbens et al, AER Sept. 2001)
Conclusions • NAIRU in Sweden has increased gradually up to the early 1990s • NAIRU has probably fallen over the 1990s • Benefit cuts and in-work tax credits have probably reduced the NAIRU • In-work tax credits in combination with other tax reforms have reduced work hours