How well-targeted are payroll tax cuts as a response to COVID-19? evidence from China

被引:0
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作者
Wei Cui
Jeffrey Hicks
Max Norton
机构
[1] Allard Law School,Department of Economics
[2] University of British Columbia,undefined
[3] University of Toronto,undefined
[4] Vancouver School of Economics,undefined
[5] University of British Columbia,undefined
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关键词
Payroll taxes; Social insurance; Labor informality; COVID; China; H25; H26; H55;
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摘要
Numerous countries cut payroll taxes in response to COVID-19, including China, which reduced employer contributions by up to 21 percentage points. We use administrative data on more than 800,000 Chinese firms to evaluate payroll tax cuts as a business relief measure. We estimate that the tax cuts cover 31.5% of the decline in business cash flow, but labor informality causes 53% of registered firms-24% of aggregate economic activity-to receive no benefits at all. We quantify the targeting of the policy in terms of how much benefits flow to small firms less able to access external finance and to sectors worse hit by COVID-19. We find that (1) small firms and vulnerable industries are comparatively more labor intensive, which leads to desirable targeting; (2) labor informality worsens, but does not eliminate, targeting by firm size; and (3) labor informality is uncorrelated with the COVID-19 shock, and therefore does not affect targeting by sector.
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页码:1321 / 1347
页数:26
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