• Mi UCrea
    Ver ítem 
    •   UCrea
    • UCrea Investigación
    • Departamento de Economía
    • D10 Proyectos de Investigación
    • Ver ítem
    •   UCrea
    • UCrea Investigación
    • Departamento de Economía
    • D10 Proyectos de Investigación
    • Ver ítem
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Aggregating Elasticities: Intensive and Extensive Margins of Female Labour Supply

    Ver/Abrir
    AggregatingElasticit ... (655.8Kb)
    Identificadores
    URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10902/14881
    DOI: 10.3386/w21315
    ISSN: 0898-2937
    Compartir
    RefworksMendeleyBibtexBase
    Estadísticas
    Ver Estadísticas
    Google Scholar
    Registro completo
    Mostrar el registro completo DC
    Autoría
    Attanasio, Orazio; Levell, Peter; Low, Hamish; Sánchez Marcos, VirginiaAutoridad Unican
    Fecha
    2018
    Derechos
    © 2015 by Orazio Attanasio, Peter Levell, Hamish Low, and Virginia Sánchez-Marcos.
    Publicado en
    NBER Working Paper No. 21315
    Editorial
    National Bureau of Economic Research
    Resumen/Abstract
    ABSTRACT: We estimate labour supply elasticities at the micro level and show what we can learn from possibly very heterogeneous elasticities for aggregate behaviour. We consider both intertemporal and intratemporal choices, and identify intensive and extensive responses in a consistent lifecycle framework, using US CEX data. There is substantial heterogeneity in how individuals respond to wage changes at all margins, both due to observables, such as age, wealth, hours worked and the wage level as well as to unobservable tastes for leisure. We estimate the distribution of Marshallian elasticities for hours worked to have a median value of 0.18, and corresponding Hicksian elasticities of 0.54 and Frisch elasticities of 0.87. At the 90th percentile, these values are 0.79, 1.16, and 1.92. Responses at the extensive margin are important, explaining about 54% of the total labour supply response for women under 30, although this importance declines with age. We show that aggregate elasticities are cyclical, being larger in recessions and particularly so in long recessions. This heterogeneity at the micro level means that the aggregate labour supply elasticity is not a structural parameter: any aggregate elasticity will depend on the demographic structure of the economy as well as the distribution of wealth and the particular point in the business cycle.
    Colecciones a las que pertenece
    • D10 Documentos de trabajo [96]
    • D10 Proyectos de Investigación [76]

    UNIVERSIDAD DE CANTABRIA

    Repositorio realizado por la Biblioteca Universitaria utilizando DSpace software
    Contacto | Sugerencias
    Metadatos sujetos a:licencia de Creative Commons Reconocimiento 4.0 España
     

     

    Listar

    Todo UCreaComunidades y coleccionesFecha de publicaciónAutoresTítulosTemasEsta colecciónFecha de publicaciónAutoresTítulosTemas

    Mi cuenta

    AccederRegistrar

    Estadísticas

    Ver Estadísticas
    Sobre UCrea
    Qué es UcreaGuía de autoarchivoArchivar tesisAcceso abiertoGuía de derechos de autorPolítica institucional
    Piensa en abierto
    Piensa en abierto
    Compartir

    UNIVERSIDAD DE CANTABRIA

    Repositorio realizado por la Biblioteca Universitaria utilizando DSpace software
    Contacto | Sugerencias
    Metadatos sujetos a:licencia de Creative Commons Reconocimiento 4.0 España