Uniform agricultural tax abolition and differential household labor supply: Evidence from China's urban household survey

被引:0
|
作者
Cai, Jun [1 ]
Zhao, Kui [1 ]
机构
[1] Huazhong Univ Sci & Technol, Sch Management, Wuhan 430074, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Female labor supply; Public education spending; Agricultural tax abolition; Human capital investment; WORKING; MOTHERS; WOMEN;
D O I
10.1016/j.chieco.2024.102175
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Uniform government public policy has steadily shaped the labor supply from households in the past few decades in China with possible differential impact on each parent. This paper investigates how uniform tax policy change plays differential roles in household's labor supply through government public education spending. Utilizing the exogenous shock from China's agricultural tax abolition in 2005, we find that the abolition results in a reduction in female employment but an increase in male employment. Specifically, a 1% increase of agricultural tax to public revenue ratio in the reference year leads to a 0.485% labor supply reduction and 1.50 fewer hours of work per month for married women, whereas the married men's labor supply increases by 0.191% and their working hours by 1.06 h in a typical urban family with schoolgoing children. The effects are greater on married women with primary school -age children and married men from high -asset households. Our mechanism analysis indicates that public education spending works as a substitute for private education spending and affects the household labor supply through investment in children's human capital. Our findings offer a new perspective on the decreasing female labor supply and the widening employment gap between (married) women and (married) men in the Chinese labor market. The findings suggest that public tax policy could lead to unintended consequences on household's labor supply decisions, and thus exacerbate the gender employment gap in the labor market.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Fertility, household structure, and parental labor supply: Evidence from China
    Guo, Rufei
    Li, Hongbin
    Yi, Junjian
    Zhang, Junsen
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS, 2018, 46 (01) : 145 - 156
  • [2] Testing the collective model of household labor supply: Evidence from China
    Chau, Tak Wai
    Li, Hongbin
    Liu, Pak Wai
    Zhang, Junsen
    [J]. CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2007, 18 (04) : 389 - 402
  • [3] Temporary migration overseas and household labor supply: Evidence from urban Philippines
    Rodriguez, ER
    Tiongson, ER
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW, 2001, 35 (03) : 709 - 725
  • [4] Effects of school closure on household labor supply: Evidence from rural China
    Xie, Gang
    Zhang, Lei
    [J]. CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2022, 71
  • [5] Emergence of urban poverty and inequality in China: evidence from household survey
    Fang, C
    Zhang, XB
    Fan, SG
    [J]. CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2002, 13 (04) : 430 - 443
  • [6] Household debt and happiness: evidence from the China Household Finance Survey
    Liu, Zhifeng
    Zhong, Xueyi
    Zhang, Tingting
    Li, Wenquan
    [J]. APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2020, 27 (03) : 199 - 205
  • [7] Environmental awareness, consumption, and labor supply: Empirical evidence from household survey data
    Iosifidi, Maria
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2016, 129 : 1 - 11
  • [8] How Does City Size Affect the Cost of Household Travel? Evidence from an Urban Household Survey in China
    Li, Zhentao
    Li, Tianzi
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (11)
  • [9] Comparing the determinants of household carbon footprints between rural and urban: evidence from China household survey data
    Lv, Jinwei
    Liu, Bing
    Chai, Li
    [J]. CHINA AGRICULTURAL ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2024,
  • [10] The Separation of Agricultural Household-Evidence from China
    Lu, Chen
    Wang, Yuyu
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION, MANAGEMENT AND SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2014, 6 : 34 - 37