Working Paper

Do Commuting Subsidies Drive Workers to Better Firms?

David R. Agrawal, Elke J. Jahn, Eckhard Janeba
CESifo, Munich, 2024

CESifo Working Paper No. 10981

An unappreciated potential benefit of commuting subsidies is that they can expand the choice set of feasible job opportunities in a way that facilitates a better job match quality. Variations in wages and initial commuting distances, combined with major reforms of the commuting subsidy formula in Germany, generate worker-specific variation in commuting subsidy changes. We study the effect of changes in these subsidies on a worker’s position in the wage distribution. Increases in the generosity of commuting subsidies induce workers to switch to higher-paying jobs with longer commutes. Although increases in commuting subsidies generally induce workers to switch to employers that pay higher wages, commuting subsidies also enhance positive assortativity in the labor market by better matching high-ability workers to higher-productivity plants. Greater assortativity induced by commuting subsidies corresponds to greater earnings inequality.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Labour Markets
Keywords: commuting, commuting subsidies, taxes, wage distribution, local labor markets, AKM, assortativity
JEL Classification: H200, H310, J200, J610, R230, R480