Adding generous government supplied benefits to Prescott’s (2002) model with em-ployment lotteries and private consumption insurance causes employment to implode and prevents the model from matching outcomes observed in Europe. To understand the role of a ‘not-so-well-known aggregation theory ’ that Prescott uses to rationalize the high labor supply elasticity that underlies his finding that higher taxes on labor have depressed Europe relative to the U.S., this paper compares aggregate outcomes for economies with two arrangements for coping with indivisible labor: (1) employ-ment lotteries plus complete consumption insurance, and (2) individual consumption smoothing via borrowing and lending at a risk-free interest rate. The two arrangement...
We use three general equilibrium models with jobs and unemployed workers to study the effects of gov...
Since the end of World War Two, the US unemployment rate has remained constant while the EU unemploy...
This paper is an attempt to explain differences in economic performance between a subset of OECD cou...
textabstractThis paper bolsters Prescott's (Fed. Reserve Bank Minneap. Q. Rev. 28(1):2-13, 2004) cla...
This paper suggests that in the US context, workers tend to invest in general human capital especial...
Abstract: This paper suggests that in the US context, workers tend to invest in general human capita...
We show a fundamental property of human capital investments : they are not independent of the aggreg...
An influential strand of recent research has claimed that large governments in European countries ex...
This paper analyzes how the frictions in the labor market simultaneously affect the economic growth ...
Europe is faced with serious problems of slow growth and little employment creation. Are the two pro...
The sustainability of Welfare States requires high employment/high participation to raise the tax ba...
This article examines the fiscal impact, and the associated welfare cost, of marginal reforms to wor...
Taxes on labour income are the most important source of revenue for the governments. There are impo...
To match broad macroeconomic observations about European and American un-employment during the last ...
We build a heterogeneous agents life cycle model that captures a large number of salient features of...
We use three general equilibrium models with jobs and unemployed workers to study the effects of gov...
Since the end of World War Two, the US unemployment rate has remained constant while the EU unemploy...
This paper is an attempt to explain differences in economic performance between a subset of OECD cou...
textabstractThis paper bolsters Prescott's (Fed. Reserve Bank Minneap. Q. Rev. 28(1):2-13, 2004) cla...
This paper suggests that in the US context, workers tend to invest in general human capital especial...
Abstract: This paper suggests that in the US context, workers tend to invest in general human capita...
We show a fundamental property of human capital investments : they are not independent of the aggreg...
An influential strand of recent research has claimed that large governments in European countries ex...
This paper analyzes how the frictions in the labor market simultaneously affect the economic growth ...
Europe is faced with serious problems of slow growth and little employment creation. Are the two pro...
The sustainability of Welfare States requires high employment/high participation to raise the tax ba...
This article examines the fiscal impact, and the associated welfare cost, of marginal reforms to wor...
Taxes on labour income are the most important source of revenue for the governments. There are impo...
To match broad macroeconomic observations about European and American un-employment during the last ...
We build a heterogeneous agents life cycle model that captures a large number of salient features of...
We use three general equilibrium models with jobs and unemployed workers to study the effects of gov...
Since the end of World War Two, the US unemployment rate has remained constant while the EU unemploy...
This paper is an attempt to explain differences in economic performance between a subset of OECD cou...