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No. wp2021-7   (Download at EconPapers)
Natalia Levenko and Karsten Staehr
Tax compliance in post-transition: You and your friends matter, not the government
This paper contributes to the literature that seeks to assess the importance of various theories on tax evasion by individuals. The various theories can be distinguished in detail using a very fine-grained survey of Estonian residents that was collected in three rounds from 2018 to 2020. Principal component analysis shows that the survey replies are mutually consistent and form distinct clusters that match key theories on tax evasion. Logit estimations of tax compliance use the principal components and various control variables as covariates. Theories of individual rational choice do not gain support. Factors associated with personal norms and with social norms and customs are important for tax compliance. Importantly, theories of reciprocity that depict a positive relation between approval of the government and tax compliance receive no support, possibly reflecting the wide spread of views on the role of government in post-transition Estonia. Sample splits reveal that the results apply broadly across various subsets of taxpayers. The results of the principal component regressions are corroborated by logit estimations where the survey variables enter individually
JEL-Codes: H26, H83
Keywords: tax evasion, monetary and non-monetary motives, auditing, behavioural choice, norms and customs, reciprocity
No. wp2021-6   (Download at EconPapers)
Mathias Juust
Trade effects of a negative export shock on direct exporters and wholesalers
This paper examines the effects on the exports of Estonian firms of the Russian export shock of 2014, which was a multifaceted negative market-wide income shock. The dataset covers all the Estonian exporters that exported to Russia in 2013 and the empirical analysis uses a difference-in-difference method in combination with the coarsened exact matching method to account for heterogeneities between the treatment and control groups. I find that the wholesalers affected were able to show better export performance after the shock than direct exporters were. The trade performance after the shock was lower for both wholesalers and direct exporters that had lower initial productivity levels
JEL-Codes: F13, F14, F23
Keywords: export shock, firm-level trade effects, trade effects, trade policy
No. wp2021-5   (Download at EconPapers)
Eva Brandten
The role of risk attitudes and expectations in household borrowing in Estonia
This study investigates the relations between risk attitudes and expectations and different aspects of borrowing by households in Estonia. The central research question is whether risk aversion and optimism provide additional information beyond the main economic and sociodemographic characteristics in explaining borrowing behaviour. The paper uses microdata from the Estonian Household Finance and Consumption Survey (HFCS) to estimate probit and Heckman models. My analysis shows that risk-tolerant households apply for loans more often than risk-averse households do and that their loans are larger. For mortgage loans, risk aversion is related to the probability of having a loan, whereas for non-mortgage loans, risk aversion is related to the size of the outstanding liabilities. The variables describing the household’s expectations for its future financial situation are on their own related to the decision to apply for a loan, but they do not contain any relevant additional information beyond the main economic and sociodemographic characteristics of the household
JEL-Codes: G51, D14
Keywords: household debt, mortgage loans, non-mortgage loans, borrowing decisions, income and price expectations, risk attitudes, Household Finance and Consumption Survey
No. wp2021-4   (Download at EconPapers)
Jaanika Meriküll and Marina Tverdostup
The gap that survived the transition: the gender wage gap over three decades in Estonia
This paper looks at the gender wage gap throughout the transition from communism to capitalism and throughout a time of rapid economic convergence. The case of Estonia is used, and micro data from the Labour Force Survey from 1989 to 2020 are employed. The communist regimes had highly regulated wage setting and high levels of educational attainment and labour market participation for women. Although the regime was formally egalitarian, the gender attitudes were conservative and the raw gender wage gap was as large as 41% at the end of the communist period in Estonia. The large gender wage gap under communist rule narrowed quickly during the first years of economic transition, but the further decline in the gap has been slow. The paper has two main messages. The first is that there is strong inertia in the gender wage gap persisting through the communist period and economic convergence. None of the known long-run cultural drivers of gender attitudes can explain this. The second is that the decline in the gap is related to the overall decline in wage inequality, the rise in minimum wages, and more egalitarian gender attitudes. The gender attitudes are responsible for a smaller effect than wage inequality is.
JEL-Codes: J31, J71, P23
Keywords: gender wage gap, wage distribution, decomposition, post-communist economies, wage inequality, minimum wages, gender attitudes
No. wp2021-3   (Download at EconPapers)
Anita Suurlaht
The asymmetric effect of monetary policy on European financial markets
This paper analyses the impact of unanticipated changes in domestic and foreign monetary policy on aggregate stock market performance and risk in ve countries: France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK, using an event study methodology. We also study whether the common monetary policy has the same impact in selected EU member states. We relate the e ect of domestic and foreign monetary policy surprises on nancial markets to the prevailing phase of the economic cycle and the state of market sentiment. Our results suggest that during recessions and periods with low sentiment, unanticipated foreign monetary policy contraction is associated with negative stock market returns and increased nancial market risk. We nd that although there is asymmetry within the monetary policy transmission to nancial markets within the EU, domestic monetary policy surprises have little effect on stock returns and stock market risk, particularly during phases of economic expansion and rising sentiment
JEL-Codes: F36; F42; G15
Keywords: Macro policy transmission; nancial markets; economic integration
No. wp2021-2   (Download at EconPapers)
Nicolas Reigl
Expectational errors and business cycle fluctuations in Europe
This paper investigates how supply noise and demand noise contribute to business cycle fluctuations in three major European economies. A structural vector autoregressive model is used to identify supply, demand, supply noise and demand shocks. The identification scheme is built on nowcast errors of output growth and the inflation rate that are derived from the Consensus Economics Survey. The results indicate that positive supply noise and positive demand noise shocks have an expansionary effect on output but their magnitude differs across countries. The two shocks contribute equally to business fluctuations and jointly they account for around one quarter of the total variation in GDP in each of the three countries.
JEL-Codes: E31, E32, E58
Keywords: Business cycles, noise shocks, SVAR, survey expectations
No. wp2021-1   (Download at EconPapers)
Juan Carlos Cuestas, Merike Kukk and Natalia Levenko
House price misalignments and economic growth in Europe
In this paper we investigate house price misalignments and their effect on the real economy. We estimate the long-term relationship between house prices and the fundamentals that determine long-term house prices for a panel of European countries with dynamic OLS, using data from 2004–2018. We find that income has been the main driver of house prices based on fundamentals in all countries, while the supply of dwellings has calmed the rise in house prices in some countries. We calculate house price misalignments, which are deviations of house prices from the value based on fundamentals, and we employ them in the growth model. The results of the growth regression indicate that house price imbalances amplify business cycles in the short term, but in the long term house price overvaluations slow economic growth down. The findings imply that it is crucial to take measures to stabilise housing cycles
JEL-Codes: E21, E44, R21, R31, G01
Keywords: housing markets, fundamental house price, misalignments, imbalances, overvaluation, economic growth
No. wp2020-8   (Download at EconPapers)
Tairi Room and Orsolya Soosaar
The gender gap in pension wealth in Europe: Evidence from twenty countries
JEL-Codes: D14, G23, G11, J32
Keywords: retirement saving behaviour, voluntary retirement savings, mandatory retirement saving system, private pension wealth, gender gap, Europe
No. wp2020-7   (Download at EconPapers)
Merike Kukk, Jaanika Merikyll and Tairi Room
The gender wealth gap in Europe: A comparative study using a model averaging methodology
There is abundant evidence on the gender wage gaps across countries, but much less is known about the gender differences in personal wealth. This paper provides comparative estimates of the gender wealth gaps for 21 European countries, employing data from the Household Finance and Consumption Survey. A common problem for studies focusing on this topic is that the data on wealth are usually provided at the household level and not at the individual level. This means it is only possible to estimate gender wealth gaps for single-person households. To overcome this constraint, we propose a novel approach using a model averaging methodology to predict individualised wealth data for multi-person households. We find that the gender wealth gaps tend to be in favour of men in the whole population, especially when estimated at the top of the wealth distribution. In contrast, the estimated gaps in the subset of single-person households tend to be statistically insignificant. The country-level gender wealth gaps are correlated with overall wealth inequality but not with gender gaps in pay and employment.
JEL-Codes: D31, G51, J16, J71
Keywords: gender gap, imputation, model averaging, wealth distribution, inequality, intra-household allocation of wealth, household finance, Europe
No. wp2020-6   (Download at EconPapers)
Merike Kukk and Natalia Levenko
Alternative financing and the non-performing loans of the corporate sector in Estonia
The paper investigates how much alternative options for corporate financing have affected the quality of domestic corporate bank loans in Estonia. We use quarterly data from 2004Q1�2019Q3 and three different methods to detect the relationship between the non-performing corporate loans of domestic banks and alternative sources of financing for firms. We find that a rise in intra-group borrowing from parent companies is associated with an increase in overdue corporate loans. There is also some evidence that foreign bank loans and trade credit might be positively related to non-performing corporate loans. The results suggest that a broader set of sources of corporate financing beyond domestic bank loans should be considered when assessing the dynamics of the overdue corporate loans of the domestic banking sector.
JEL-Codes: G32, G34, C11, C14
Keywords: corporate debt, non-performing loans, alternative financing, Bayesian model averaging, local projection method