Taxing Work: Some Political and Economic Aspects of Labor Income Taxation
WZB, Markets and Political Economy Working Paper No. SP II 2003-17
52 Pages Posted: 3 Dec 2003
Date Written: October 2003
Abstract
This paper examines the development of tax regimes across the OECD countries in the latter part of the 20th century. It pays particular attention to taxes on labor income. A number of results emerge from this examination. First, not only do taxes on labor income represent a major drain on private households; they have become the mainstay of many of these countries' public sector finances. Second, taxes on labor income, and not taxes on capital, appear to be the preferred instrument of finance for those economic and political interests that advocate and support a strong (and thereby expensive)welfare state. There is little "free lunch" to be had in these welfare states; if anything, "socialism in one class" seems to be the rule. Third, while the effort at financing the welfare state this way comes at cost in terms of loss in employment, the magnitude of such loss is inversely related to the degree of wage coordination in the labor market.
Keywords: Taxation, Partisan Politics, Institutions, Varieties of Capitalism
JEL Classification: H24, J32, J50, J64
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation