Abstract

Payroll taxes represent a major distortionary influence of governments on labor markets. This paper examines the role of time-varying payroll taxes and the social safety net for cyclical fluctuations in a nonmonetary economy with labor market frictions and unemployment insurance, when the latter is only imperfectly related to search effort. A balanced social insurance budget induces countercyclical payroll taxation, renders gross wages more rigid over the cycle and strengthens the model’s endogenous propagation mechanism. For conventional calibrations, the model generates a negatively-sloped Beveridge curve and countercyclical unemployment as well as substantial volatility and persistence of vacancies and unemployment.

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