First-Time Mothers and the Labor Market Effects of the Earned Income Tax Credit

Peter Shirley

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

Résumé

The Earned Income Tax Credit is one of the largest anti-poverty programs in the United States, providing over $67 billion to more than 27 million families for tax year 2016, an average of $2,455. By subsidizing the earnings of low-income workers, the EITC reduces poverty both directly through the credit itself and indirectly through labor supply incentives. The two primary determinants of the amount a tax unit receives are earned income and number of children. Many studies define eligibility based on the presence of children in a household and separate analyses by marital status, a reflection of the fundamentally different
incentives the EITC poses for single- and dual-earner households. However, as the EITC theoretically encourages fertility and generally discourages marriage, endogenous responses along these two dimensions could bias estimates which rely on them for identification and sample selection. In this paper, I revisit the classic question of the EITC's labor market effects while exploiting a source of arguably exogenous variation in EITC receipt that does not rely on these potentially endogenous characteristics: birth timing around the end of the calendar year. Using the Study of Income and Program Participation, my results
show positive earnings and employment effects for unmarried women in the 12 months following their first/only child's birth, including for those with a high school degree or less (low-ed). Overall, the results are usually small and insignificant for married women, with the exception of negative (and sometimes significant) effects on earnings for low-ed married women. Using a difference-in-discontinuities approach, I separate the income effect of the credit itself from the information effect, which I argue occurs when women receive the EITC for the first time. I show that, while the income effect is negative across all groups of women, the information effects are positive for unmarried women and negative for married women, again consistent with theory and the body of evidence on the EITC.
langue originaleAnglais
Nombre de pages53
journalIZA Journal of Labor Policy
Volume10
Numéro de publication1
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 14 août 2020

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