Essays on Macroeconomic Policies and Redistribution

Essays on Macroeconomic Policies and Redistribution

Author: Karen Davtyan

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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"The general objective of the doctoral thesis is to evaluate the distributive effects of macroeconomic policies. In particular, the thesis assesses the distributional impact of fiscal policy, conventional and unconventional monetary policies. The distributive effect of fiscal policy is examined by analyzing the interrelations among economic growth, income inequality, and fiscal performance based on the evidence from the Anglo-Saxon countries. These interrelations are analyzed jointly in a system by examining also transmission channels among them. All the variables are regarded as endogenous within the framework of the structural vector autoregression methodology. This allows exploring dynamic interactions among the variables and feedback effects on each other through impulse response functions. In addition, the thesis provides new evidence on interrelations among economic growth, income inequality, and fiscal performance by employing the longest possible consistently measured data on income inequality on a country basis. The obtained results show that there are differences in the obtained results for the countries. Particularly, income inequality has negative effect on economic growth in the case of the UK while its effect is positive in the cases of the USA and Canada. The increase in inequality worsens fiscal performance for all the countries. Government spending reduces income inequality in the UK but it raises inequality in the USA and Canada. In addition, the results also indicate that tax revenues generally raise income inequality in all the considered countries. Thus, the measures of the fiscal policy channel are important tools to consider in the design of the policies to decrease inequality. The academic literature generally views fiscal policy as a measure to address growing income inequality, which is a widespread concern nowadays. Although the income distribution could also be affected by monetary policy, the distributive effects of monetary policy have not broadly been discussed in the literature. Taking this into account, the thesis contributes to the discussion in this research area by evaluating the effect of monetary policy on income inequality. The distributional effect of monetary policy is estimated in the case of the USA, where the dynamics in income inequality has mainly been driven by the variation in the upper end of distribution since early 1980's. Consequently, the thesis uses an inequality measure that represents the whole distribution of income. To identify a monetary policy shock, the thesis employs contemporaneous identification with ex-ante identified monetary policy shocks as well as log run identification. In particular, a cointegration relation has been determined among the considered variables and the vector error correction methodology has been applied for the identification of the monetary policy shock. The obtained results indicate that contractionary monetary policy decreases the overall income inequality in the country. These results could have important implications for the design of policies to reduce income inequality by giving more weight to monetary policy. In the wake of the global financial crisis, central banks have generally begun to implement unconventional monetary policy together with conventional policy measures. There are already numerous studies on the impact of unconventional monetary policy measures on financial market as well as on their macroeconomic effect. However, the distributive effect of unconventional monetary policy has not essentially been examined yet. The thesis fills this gap by evaluating the distributive impact of unconventional monetary policy in comparison with the distributional effect of conventional monetary policy. The distributional effects of conventional and unconventional monetary policies are evaluated for the USA. The distributive impact of conventional monetary policy is explored through contractionary policy shocks. At the same time, the distributional effect of unconventional monetary policy is studied via expansionary policy shocks. The obtained results indicate that conventional monetary policy reduces income inequality while unconventional monetary policy raises it. In particular, the distributive impact of conventional monetary policy is stronger. The results also show that the both conventional and unconventional monetary policies significantly affect the upper part of income distribution. While conventional monetary policy does not significantly affect the lower part of income distribution, unconventional monetary policy has still a significant impact on it. In addition, the implemented variance decomposition analysis assesses the relative importance of conventional and unconventional monetary policy shocks in the variation of Gini index of income inequality. The obtained results indicate that the unconventional monetary policy shock explains the higher share of the variation in Gini index than the conventional monetary policy shock."--TDX.


Essays on International Macroeconomics and Fiscal Policy

Essays on International Macroeconomics and Fiscal Policy

Author: Loukas Karabarbounis

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 412

ISBN-13:

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In all cases, men commit to a career in the market and take less home duties than women. As a result, their market work becomes less substitutable to home duty. When society resolves its distributional concerns efficiently with gender-specific lump sum transfers, GBT with higher marginal tax rates on men is optimal. The third essay examines the relationship between inequality and redistribution in a panel of OECD countries. Using panel data methods that hold constant a variety of determinants of redistributive spending, I find a non-monotonic relationship between pre-tax-and-transfer distribution of income and redistribution. Relative to mean income, a more affluent rich and middle class are associated with less redistribution and a richer poor class is associated with more redistribution. These results are consistent with a one dollar, one vote politico-economic equilibrium: When the income of a group of citizens increases, aggregate redistributive policies tilt towards this group's most preferred policies.


Essays in Economic Policy and Economic Growth

Essays in Economic Policy and Economic Growth

Author: I. G. Patel

Publisher: Springer

Published: 1986-10-13

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13: 134918358X

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Research papers, economic policy, economic development, India - examines development policy, trade policy, balance of payments, agricultural policy, inflation, income distribution, economic planning, productivity policy, etc.; studies the repercussions on employment, basic needs fulfilment, low income families, etc; evaluates the impact on developing countries of development aid, economic aid and economic cooperation.


Essays in Macroeconomics

Essays in Macroeconomics

Author: Andres P. Drenik

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation contains three essays on macroeconomics and optimal redistributive schemes. The first chapter studies two channels through which exchange rate policy affects the real economy. First, if nominal wages do not decrease during a recession, a nominal devaluation of the currency -- as opposed to a fixed exchange rate -- reduces unemployment by lowering wages in real terms. However, if not all wages are equally rigid, sectoral labor markets respond differently under different exchange rate regimes, and redistributive effects arise. Second, nominal devaluations can have an effect on the real value of nominal asset positions. The desirability of a nominal devaluation is analyzed in the context of a quantitative small open economy model. The model features heterogeneous workers and sectoral labor markets that differ in the degree of nominal rigidities. Using data from Argentina, I estimate the model to match aggregate and worker-level moments regarding labor market choices. The model predicts that fixed exchange rate regimes reduce employment and welfare during a recession. A devaluation that does not affect the real value of workers' nominal positions improves the overall well-being of workers, but entails a redistribution of welfare across certain groups of workers. Revaluation effects can be strong enough to overcome the labor market gain of a nominal devaluation. The second chapter is co-authored with Diego Perez. When setting prices firms use idiosyncratic information about the demand for their products as well as public information about the aggregate macroeconomic state. This chapter provides an empirical assessment of the relationship between the availability of public information about inflation and price setting. We exploit an event in which agents lost access to information about the inflation rate: the manipulation of inflation statistics that occurred in Argentina starting in 2007. Our difference-in-difference analysis reveals that this policy had associated an increase in the coefficient of variation of prices of 13% with respect to its mean. This effect is analyzed in the context of a quantitative general equilibrium model in which firms use information about the inflation rate to set prices. Consistent with empirical evidence, we find that monetary policy becomes more effective with less precise information about inflation. Not reporting accurate measures of the CPI entails significant welfare losses, especially in economies with volatile monetary policies. The final chapter is co-authored with Ricardo Perez-Truglia. In it we study the role of fairness concerns in the demand for redistribution through workfare. In the first part of the paper, we present new evidence from a survey experiment. We show that individuals are more generous towards poor people whom they perceive to be diligent workers relative to poor people whom they perceive to be non-diligent, a social preference that we label sympathy for the diligent. This preference is much stronger than preferences regarding other characteristics of the poor, such as race, nationality, and disability. More important, we show that subjects with higher sympathy for the diligent have a stronger preference for workfare programs. In the second part of the paper, we incorporate our empirical findings into a model of income redistribution. We consider the case of a benevolent government with fairness concerns that prioritizes the well-being of individuals who exert the most effort. We characterize the optimal conditions under which the government introduces work requirements. Even if wasteful, work requirements can be optimal, because they allow for a better distinction between individuals who exert great effort and individuals who do not. However, if the government lacks commitment power, the availability of screening through work requirements leads to a lower equilibrium effort and, possibly, a Pareto-dominated allocation.


Inequality and Economic Policy

Inequality and Economic Policy

Author: Tom Church

Publisher: Hoover Press

Published: 2015-12-01

Total Pages: 238

ISBN-13: 0817919066

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Drawing from a 2014 Hoover Institution Conference on Inequality in honor of Gary Becker, a group of distinguished contributors explore various measures of inequality in America and address the issue of whether or not it is increasing. In looking at this question and examining policy implications, the authors draw on research on human capital and intergenerational mobility. The authors suggest that the emphasis on inequality and redistribution, while not wrong, is nevertheless misplaced, for it may lead us to adopt policies that will disrupt the progress we have made while doing nothing to promote the kind of growth that is essential to national progress.


Economic Development, the Family, and Income Distribution

Economic Development, the Family, and Income Distribution

Author: Simon Kuznets

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2002-09-12

Total Pages: 476

ISBN-13: 9780521521963

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This is a collection of essays by Simon Kuznets, winner of the 1971 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, published posthumously. It represents the primary concerns of his research at a late phase of his career, as well as themes from his earlier work. The first four chapters deal with 'modern economic growth'. Chapters five to seven introduce the main theme of the remainder of the volume: interrelations between demographic change and income inequality. Chapters eight to ten draw on a wider set of data to make comparisons of income inequality among societies at widely different levels of development. Chapter eleven returns to data for the United States to develop more fully the importance of differing childbearing patterns for income inequality. In the introduction Professor Richard Easterlin discusses the relationship of the essays to the balance of Kuznets's writings. In the afterword Professor Robert Fogel discusses the methodologies favoured by Kuznets.


Essays on the Macroeconomic Effects of Inequality

Essays on the Macroeconomic Effects of Inequality

Author: Guzmán González-Torres Fernández

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation explores the aggregate allocational effects of different forms of economic inequality. Its three chapters study how an uneven distribution of production factors and financial resources, coupled with different forms of bureaucratic hurdles to the development of business ideas, financial constraints, or credit shocks, can affect the distribution and productivity of firms, the composition of the demand for goods and services, or the creation of valuable worker-firm matches in an economy. Even though it becomes clear throughout the dissertation that eliminating as many frictions in the firm-creation process, putting in place different redistribution policies, and alleviating financial frictions in an economy all have great effects on the aggregate economy that were not completely understood in previous theories, the welfare effects of such policies remain a subject for study in future work.


Growth, Unemployment, Distribution and Government

Growth, Unemployment, Distribution and Government

Author: V. Borooah

Publisher: Springer

Published: 1996-08-09

Total Pages: 196

ISBN-13: 0230373003

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The purpose of this book is to set out in a comprehensive, but succinct manner, the key points surrounding four economic issues that generate, today, much discussion and debate. These are the issues of growth, unemployment, distribution and government. It is aimed at an audience that is sufficiently interested in economic issues to read a book that sets out these issues clearly, comprehensively and above all, seriously. This has implications for both the style and the content of the book. Clarity requires that the arguments be presented coherently, without resort to jargon. Comprehensiveness requires a wide perspective embracing theoretical, empirical and policy matters. Lastly, seriousness requires that the most up-to-date thinking on economic matters is presented in digestible form, but without violence to the integrity of the original arguments. Achieving this trinity of objectives has been the primary aim of this book.


Microeconomics, Macroeconomics and Economic Policy

Microeconomics, Macroeconomics and Economic Policy

Author: P. Arestis

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2011-07-26

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 0230313752

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Microeconomics, Macroeconomics and Economic Policy are at the core of research and study in economics. The essays in this volume have been specifically commissioned and brought together to celebrate the work of Malcolm Sawyer, who has made substantial contributions in these areas.