This paper uses administrative data to analyze a large employer-borne payroll tax rate cut for young workers in Sweden. We find no effect on net-of-tax wages of young treated workers relative to slightly older untreated workers, and a 2–3 percentage point increase in youth employment. Firms employing many young workers receive a larger tax windfall and expand right after the reform: employment, capital, sales, and profits increase. These effects appear stronger in credit-constrained firms. Youth-intensive firms also increase the wages of all their workers collectively, young as well as old, consistent with rent sharing of the tax windfall.
American Economic Review
Payroll Taxes, Firm Behavior, and Rent Sharing: Evidence from a Young Workers' Tax Cut in Sweden
Journal Article
Reference
Saez, Emmanuel, Benjamin Schoefer and David Seim (2019). “Payroll Taxes, Firm Behavior, and Rent Sharing: Evidence from a Young Workers' Tax Cut in Sweden”. American Economic Review 109(5), 1717–1763. doi.org/10.1257/aer.20171937
Saez, Emmanuel, Benjamin Schoefer and David Seim (2019). “Payroll Taxes, Firm Behavior, and Rent Sharing: Evidence from a Young Workers' Tax Cut in Sweden”. American Economic Review 109(5), 1717–1763. doi.org/10.1257/aer.20171937
Authors
Emmanuel Saez,
Benjamin Schoefer,
David Seim