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Creator: Austen-Smith, David Series: Conference on economics and politics Abstract: This paper explores the extent and character of interest group influence on legislative policy in a model of decision making under incomplete information. A committee may propose an alternative to a given status quo under closed rule. Policies are related to consequences with ex ante uncertainty. An interest group is able to acquire policy—relevant information at a price, and has access to legislators at both the agenda setting stage and the vote stage. Lobbying is modeled as a game of strategic information transmission. The price of information is itself a private datum to the group, and legislators cannot observe whether the group elects to become informed. If the group is informed, then its information is likewise private. Among the results are: that not all informed lobbyists choose to try and influence the agenda directly; that there can coexist influential lobbying at both stages of the process; and that while informative agenda stage lobbying is genetically influential, the same is not true of voting stage lobbying.
Subject (JEL): D72 - Political Processes: Rent-seeking, Lobbying, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior and D83 - Search; Learning; Information and Knowledge; Communication; Belief; Unawareness -
Creator: Mulligan, Casey B. Series: Great depressions of the twentieth century Abstract: I prove some theorems for competitive equilibria in the presence of distortionary taxes and other restraints of trade, and use those theorems to motivate an algorithm for (exactly) computing and empirically evaluating competitive equilibria in dynamic economies. Although its economics is relatively sophisticated, the algorithm is so computationally economical that it can be implemented with a few lines in a spreadsheet. Although a competitive equilibrium models interactions between all sectors, all consumer types, and all time periods, I show how my algorithm permits separate empirical evaluation of these pieces of the model and hence is practical even when very little data is available. For similar reasons, these evaluations are not particularly sensitive to how data is partitioned into "trends" and "cycles." I then compute a real business cycle model with distortionary taxes that fits aggregate U.S. time series for the period 1929-50 and conclude that, if it is to explain aggregate behavior during the period, government policy must have heavily taxed labor income during the Great Depression and lightly taxed it during the war. In other words, the challenge for the competitive equilibrium approach is not so much why output might change over time, but why the marginal product of labor and the marginal value of leisure diverged so much and why that wedge persisted so long. In this sense, explaining aggregate behavior during the period has been reduced to a public finance question - were actual government policies distorting behavior in the same direction and magnitude as government policies in the model?
Keyword: Taxes, World War 2, Depressions, and Competitive equilibrium models Subject (JEL): H30 - Fiscal Policies and Behavior of Economic Agents: General, E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, and C68 - Computable General Equilibrium Models -
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Creator: Geweke, John Series: New methods in business cycle research Abstract: A simple stochastic model of the firm is constructed in which a dynamic monopolist who maximizes a discounted profits stream subject to labor adjustment costs and given factor prices sets output price as a distributed lag of past wages and input prices. If the observed relation of wages and prices in manufacturing arises solely from this behavior then wages and input prices are exogenous with respect to output prices. In tests using quarterly and monthly series for the straight time wage, an index of raw materials prices and the wholesale price index for manufacturing and its durable and nondurable subsectors this hypothesis cannot be refuted for the period 1955:1 to 1971:11. During the period 1926:1 to 1940:11, however, symmetrically opposite behavior is observed manufacturing wholesale prices are exogenous with respect to the wage rate, a relation which can arise if dynamically monopsonistic firms compete in product markets. Neither structural relation has withstood direct wage and price controls.
Keyword: Wholesale, Labor, Manufacturing, Prices, and Wages Subject (JEL): E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, E31 - Price Level; Inflation; Deflation, and L60 - Industry Studies: Manufacturing: General -
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Creator: Prati, Alessandro, 1961- Series: Monetary theory and financial intermediation Abstract: The data and press commentaries studied in this paper call for a reinterpretation of the French inflationary crisis and its stabilization in 1926. In contrast with T. J. Sargent's (1984) interpretation, there is evidence that the budgetary situation was well in hand and that only fear of a capital levy made the public unwilling to buy government bonds. As a result, the government had to repay the bonds coming to maturity with monetary financing. Only when Poincare introduced a bill to shift the tax burden off bondholders did the demand for government bonds recover and inflation stop.
Subject (JEL): E31 - Price Level; Inflation; Deflation, E52 - Monetary Policy, E65 - Studies of Particular Policy Episodes, and N24 - Economic History: Financial Markets and Institutions: Europe: 1913- -
Creator: Boot, Arnoud W. A. (Willem Alexander), 1960-; Greenbaum, Stuart I.; and Thakor, Anjan V. Series: Monetary theory and financial intermediation Abstract: We explain why contracting parties may choose ambiguous financial contracts. Introducing ambiguity may be optimal, even when unambiguous contracts can be costlessly written. We show that an ambiguous contract has two advantages. First, it permits the guarantor to sacrifice reputational capital in order to preserve financial capital as well as information reusability in states where such tradeoff is optimal. Second, it fosters the development of reputation. This theory is then used to explain ambiguity in mutual fund contracts, bank loan commitments, bank holding company relationships, the investment banker's "highly confident" letter, non-recourse debt contracts in project financing, and other financial contracts.
Subject (JEL): G20 - Financial Institutions and Services: General, K12 - Contract Law, and D86 - Economics of Contract: Theory -
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Creator: Hopenhayn, Hugo Andres and Vereshchagina, Galina Series: Advances in dynamic economics Abstract: Entrepreneurs bear substantial risk, but empirical evidence shows no sign of a positive premium. This paper develops a theory of endogenous entrepreneurial risk taking that explains why self-financed entrepreneurs may find it optimal to invest into risky projects offering no risk premium. The model has also a number of implications for firm dynamics supported by empirical evidence, such as a positive correlation between survival, size, and firm age.
Keyword: Occupational choice, Risk taking, Borrowing constraints, Intertemporal firm choice, Financing, Firm dynamics, and Investment Subject (JEL): G32 - Financing Policy; Financial Risk and Risk Management; Capital and Ownership Structure; Value of Firms; Goodwill, L25 - Firm Performance: Size, Diversification, and Scope, E21 - Macroeconomics: Consumption; Saving; Wealth, and L26 - Entrepreneurship -
Creator: Huffman, Gregory W. Series: Finance, fluctuations, and development Abstract: In this paper a dynamic model is constructed in which labor and capital taxes are determined endogenously through majority voting. The wealth distribution of the economy is shown to influence the voting behavior, and hence the equilibrium levels of the tax rates, which in turn affect the future distribution of wealth. It is shown that the economy exhibits a unique dynamic behavior. Because of the endogenously determined taxes, the asset prices, wealth distribution, and the tax rates can display persistent fluctuations, and even limit cycles, in reaction to exogenous disturbances, or even due to initial conditions. It is also shown that "tax smoothing" does not necessarily appear to naturally arise in such a model, as the economy can display extreme fluctuations in the endogenously determined tax rates.
Keyword: Voting behavior, Tax rates, Wealth distribution, Dynamic general equilibrium model, Asset prices, and Policy formulation Subject (JEL): H24 - Personal Income and Other Nonbusiness Taxes and Subsidies; includes inheritance and gift taxes, H25 - Business Taxes and Subsidies including sales and value-added (VAT), D31 - Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions, and H20 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General -
Creator: Galor, Oded, 1953- and Weil, David N. Series: Productivity and the industrial revolution Abstract: This paper develops a unified model of growth, population, and technological progress that is consistent with long-term historical evidence. The economy endogenously evolves through three phases. In the Malthusian regime, population growth is positively related to the level of income per capita. Technological progress is slow and is matched by proportional increases in population, so that output per capita is stable around a constant level. In the post-Malthusian regime, the growth rates of technology and total output increase. Population growth absorbs much of the growth of output, but income per capita does rise slowly. The economy endogenously undergoes a demographic transition in which the traditionally positive relationship between income per capita and population growth is reversed. In the Modern Growth regime, population growth is moderate or even negative, and income per capita rises rapidly. Two forces drive the transitions between regimes: First, technological progress is driven both by increases in the size of the population and by increases in the average level of education. Second, technological progress creates a state of disequilibrium, which raises the return to human capital and induces parents to substitute child quality for quantity.
Keyword: Demographics, Population, Technological change, Malthusian, Development, Growth, Demographic transition, and Fertility Subject (JEL): O11 - Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development, J13 - Fertility; Family Planning; Child Care; Children; Youth, O40 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: General, and O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes -
Creator: Geweke, John Series: New methods in business cycle research Keyword: Optimal price, Forecasts, and Firm behavior Subject (JEL): E31 - Price Level; Inflation; Deflation and L60 - Industry Studies: Manufacturing: General