Income splitting, specialization, and intra-family distribution |
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Authors: | Elisabeth Gugl |
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Affiliation: | Department of Economics, University of Victoria |
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Abstract: | Abstract Income splitting for tax purposes results in more specialization of wives, but does this in turn generate more gender inequality? In my dynamic bargaining model with a divorce threatpoint, I find that who controls the couple's labour supply plays a crucial role in establishing this link. If spouses choose their labour supply non‐cooperatively, only the husband's increase – but not her own decrease – in labour supply introduces a negative term in the wife's change in welfare. If the wife does not control her own labour supply, a decrease in her own labour supply introduces an additional negative term. |
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Keywords: | H31 D13 |
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