
handle: 10419/110969
This paper utilises the discontinuities induced by earnings caps for social security contributions (SSC) in Germany to analyse the effect of SSC on gross labour earnings. Economic incidence is identified by exploiting an increase of a regional earnings cap of health and long-term care insurance as a natural experiment. Based on administrative data, difference-in-differences models are estimated. I find the burden of SSC is shared equally between employers and employees. An auxiliary analysis studies employment responses to SSC at the intensive margin by a modified bunching approach that is applied to the earnings caps of health and long-term care insurance. Finding employment responses to be negligible supports crucial identifying assumptions of the main analysis. Both results are robust and consistent with a standard partial-equilibrium labour market model.
J38, ddc:330, H24, Social security contributions, tax incidence, labour supply elasticities, labour demand elasticities, bunching, Social Security Contributions, Labour Demand Elasticities, Labour Supply Elasticities, H22, Bunching, Tax Incidence, jel: jel:H22, jel: jel:H24, jel: jel:J38
J38, ddc:330, H24, Social security contributions, tax incidence, labour supply elasticities, labour demand elasticities, bunching, Social Security Contributions, Labour Demand Elasticities, Labour Supply Elasticities, H22, Bunching, Tax Incidence, jel: jel:H22, jel: jel:H24, jel: jel:J38
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