Beschreibung
In this paper, it is argued that shadow activities and different levels of marketization of household production systematically distort international comparisons of aggregate gross household saving rates (HSR): Higher shares of hidden income increase observed HSR. Cross-sectional data for eighteen(twenty-four) countries covering a period of a decade show that gross HSR are positively related to the degree of corruption (used as a proxy of thepropensity to shift economic activities into the shadow) and to the share of income from property and self-employment. They are negatively related to the female employment rate, the ratio of indirect taxes to direct taxes and to the tax wedge. A plausible story behind these phenomena might be that unobserved consumption and wages in the black labor market induce an upward bias of observed HSR and profit shares, while the price level effects of a higher share of indirect taxes and a welfare state effect lower observed HSR. As expected, the female employment rate (used as an indicator of marketization) is negatively related to household saving rates.
| Zeitraum | 23 Juli 2009 → 26 Juli 2009 |
|---|---|
| Ereignistitel | Shadow Economy, Tax Evasion & Sozial Norms |
| Veranstaltungstyp | Keine Angaben |
| Bekanntheitsgrad | International |