Description
Abstract: From 1961 to 2007, U.S. aggregate hours worked increased and the labor wedge-measured as the discrepancy between a representative household's marginal rate of substitution and the marginal product of labor-declined substantially. The labor wedge is negatively related to hours and is often attributed to labor income taxes. However, U.S. labor income taxes increased since 1961. We examine a model with gender and marital status heterogeneity which accounts for the trends in the U.S. hours and the labor wedge. Apart from taxes, the model's labor wedge reflects non-distortionary cross-sectional differences in households' hours worked and productivity. We provide evidence that household heterogeneity is important for long-run changes in labor wedges and hours in other OECD economies.