The Marginal Labor Supply Disincentives of Welfare: Evidence from Administrative Barriers to Participation

78 Pages Posted: 19 May 2022 Last revised: 6 May 2025

See all articles by Robert A. Moffitt

Robert A. Moffitt

Johns Hopkins University - Department of Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Matthew Zahn

Johns Hopkins University

Multiple version iconThere are 3 versions of this paper

Abstract

Existing research on the static effects of the manipulation of welfare program benefit parameters on labor supply has allowed only restrictive forms of heterogeneity in preferences. Yet preference heterogeneity implies that the marginal effects on labor supply of welfare expansions and contractions may differ in different time periods with different populations and which sweep out different portions of the distribution of preferences. A new examination of the heavily studied AFDC program uses variation in state-level administrative barriers to entering the program in the late 1980s and early 1990s to estimate the marginal labor supply effects of changes in program participation induced by that variation. The estimates are obtained from a theory-consistent reduced form model which allows for a nonparametric specification of how changes in welfare program participation affect labor supply on the margin. Estimates using a form of local instrumental variables show that the marginal treatment effects are quadratic, rising and then falling as participation rates rise (i.e., becoming more negative then less negative on hours of work). The average work disincentive is not large but that masks some margins where effects are close to zero and some which are sizable. Traditional IV which estimates a weighted average of marginal effects gives a misleading picture of marginal responses. A counterfactual exercise which applies the estimates to three historical reform periods in 1967, 1981, and 1996 when the program tax rate was significantly altered shows that marginal labor supply responses differed in each period because of differences in the level of participation in the period and the composition of who was on the program.

Keywords: welfare, labor supply, marginal treatment effects

JEL Classification: I3, J2, C21

Suggested Citation

Moffitt, Robert and Zahn, Matthew, The Marginal Labor Supply Disincentives of Welfare: Evidence from Administrative Barriers to Participation. IZA Discussion Paper No. 15046, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4114590

Robert Moffitt (Contact Author)

Johns Hopkins University - Department of Economics ( email )

Baltimore, MD 21218-2685
United States
410-516-7611 (Phone)
410-516-7600 (Fax)

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

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Cambridge, MA 02138
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Matthew Zahn

Johns Hopkins University ( email )

Baltimore, MD 20036-1984
United States

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