Abstract

Nonlinear taxes create econometric difficulties when estimating labor supply functions. One estimation method that tackles these problems accounts for the complete form of the budget constraint and uses the maximum likelihood method to estimate parameters. Another method linearizes budget constraints and uses instrumental variables techniques. Using Monte Carlo simulations I investigate the small-sample properties of these estimation methods and how they are affected by measurement errors in independent variables. No estimator is uniquely best. Hence, in actual estimation the choice of estimator should depend on the sample size and type of measurement errors in the data. Complementing actual estimates with a Monte Carlo study of the estimator used, given the type of measurement errors that characterize the data, would often help interpreting the estimates. This paper shows how such a study can be performed.

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