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Joint Taxation and the Labour Supply of Married Women: Evidence from the Canadian Tax Reform of 1988*
53
Citations
11
References
2007
Year
Optimal TaxationFiscal IssueCorporate TaxSpousal Tax ExemptionJoint TaxationLawTax IncentiveCorporate TaxationMarried WomenGender StudiesCanadian Tax ReformMarginal Tax RatesEstate TaxTax PolicyTax LawEconomicsPublic PolicyLabour SupplyTax SystemTax AvoidanceLabor EconomicsHousehold LaborFamily EconomicsFederal TaxFederal Income TaxPartnership TaxBusiness
Abstract The Canadian federal tax reform of 1988 replaced a spousal tax exemption with a non‐refundable tax credit. This reduced the‘jointness’of the tax system: after the reform, secondary earners’effective‘first dollar’marginal tax rates no longer depended on the marginal tax rates of their spouses. In practice, the effective‘first dollar’marginal tax rates faced by women with high‐income husbands were particularly reduced. Using difference‐indifference estimators, we find a significant increase in labour force participation among women married to higher‐income husbands.
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