Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5055498 Economic Modelling 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper provides a comparative static analysis of farm household's production, consumption, and labor market decisions under alternative tax policies. We explore the implications of non-separable household decisions caused by widespread non-participation in labor, land, financial and/or food markets, as is typical of low income economies. The analytical results indicate that when labor market imperfections occur, most tax-induced responses are ambiguous, mainly due to shadow price effects. This is particularly the case for the labor market and production responses to most tax tools under study, while a decreasing demand for consumption goods appears to be the result in several cases. Furthermore, tax-induced allocation effects may differ between the non-separable and the separable model versions, indicating the potential impact of labor market constraints on farm household responses to tax policies. In particular, standard taxes as well as a land tax may imply production adjustments in the case of non-separability.

We analyze farm household's decisions under alternative tax policies. The analysis covers consumption, production as well as labor demand and supply. Ambiguous tax-induced responses emerge when labor market imperfections exist. Ambiguous household's responses relates mainly to shadow price effects. Under non-separability, standard taxes may imply production adjustments.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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