Working Paper

State Taxation of Nonresident Income and the Location of Work

David R. Agrawal, Kenneth Tester
CESifo, Munich, 2023

CESifo Working Paper No. 10353

Prior studies show that taxes matter for the residential locations of high-income earners. But, states raise a significant share of revenue from nonresidents. Using variation in state tax rates, we provide causal evidence on the effect of the net-of-tax rate on the location of labor supply for professional golfers. State taxes induce high-income earners to shift employment to low-tax states without a residence change. The elasticity of working in a state is 0.34, and consistent with superstar phenomenon, increases with earnings. Our results suggest a novel margin of mobility responses for top-earners: the spatial relocation of labor supply by nonresidents.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Labour Markets
Keywords: state taxes, superstars, taxing the rich, avoidance, mobility, high-frequency labor supply
JEL Classification: J220, J610, H260, H730, R500