Sectoral labor supply, choice restrictions and functionalform
Working paper
View/ Open
Date
2004Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Discussion Papers [1004]
Abstract
Abstract:
In this paper we discuss a general framework for analyzing labor supply behavior in the presence of
complicated budget- and quantity constraints of which some are unobserved. The individual’s labor
supply decision is viewed as a choice from a set of discrete alternatives (jobs). These jobs are
characterized by attributes such as hours of work, sector specific wages and other sector specific
aspects of the jobs. We focus in particular on the theoretical justification of functional form
assumptions and properties of the random components of the model.
The labor supply model for married women is estimated on Norwegian data. Wage elasticities
and the outcome of a tax reform analysis show that overall labor supply is moderately elastic, but
these modest overall responses shadow for much stronger inter-sectoral changes. Our structural
model, with a detailed specification of job opportunities, is compared empirically with a model in
which the utility is approximated with a series expansion. It turns out that the performance of our
model is at least as good as the labor supply model with flexible preferences.
Keywords: Labor supply, non-convex budget sets, non-pecuniary job-attributes, sector-specific
wages.