The literature on international transfers largely ignores the fact that transfers are often given in the form of money. We analyze both the welfare consequences of financial transfers for the donor and the recipient, and their impact on the current account. Under normal circumstances transfer paradoxes do not occur, the donor's current account deteriorates and the recipient's current account improves.
Develops the basic analysis of transfers when there are two economic agents (countries) engaged in t...
We revisit the classic transfer problem, accounting for two channels of adjustment: increased trade ...
The paper examines the effects of tied-aid on the welfare of both the donor and the recipient countr...
The literature on international transfers largely ignores the fact that transfers are often given in...
The classical transfer problem is studied in an overlapping generations framework, where the transfe...
This paper shows that an international transfer payment may paradoxically immiserize the recipient c...
This paper examines the effects of international income transfers on welfare and capital accumulatio...
This paper examines the effects of international income transfers in the presence of technological u...
There are many studies in the literature that deal with the welfare effects of income transfers betw...
This paper analyses impacts of unilateral income and capital transfers on welfare and terms of...
An issue that has been extensively investigated in the literature involves the effects of transfers ...
This paper examines whether altruism causes the transfer paradox in the model with two countries and...
We demonstrate that the phenomenon of immiserizing transfers from abroad (and the analytically symme...
textabstractWithout denying the potential for publically-funded redistribution, as is done by market...
textabstractThe external financing of domestic government expenditures, as exemplified by the financ...
Develops the basic analysis of transfers when there are two economic agents (countries) engaged in t...
We revisit the classic transfer problem, accounting for two channels of adjustment: increased trade ...
The paper examines the effects of tied-aid on the welfare of both the donor and the recipient countr...
The literature on international transfers largely ignores the fact that transfers are often given in...
The classical transfer problem is studied in an overlapping generations framework, where the transfe...
This paper shows that an international transfer payment may paradoxically immiserize the recipient c...
This paper examines the effects of international income transfers on welfare and capital accumulatio...
This paper examines the effects of international income transfers in the presence of technological u...
There are many studies in the literature that deal with the welfare effects of income transfers betw...
This paper analyses impacts of unilateral income and capital transfers on welfare and terms of...
An issue that has been extensively investigated in the literature involves the effects of transfers ...
This paper examines whether altruism causes the transfer paradox in the model with two countries and...
We demonstrate that the phenomenon of immiserizing transfers from abroad (and the analytically symme...
textabstractWithout denying the potential for publically-funded redistribution, as is done by market...
textabstractThe external financing of domestic government expenditures, as exemplified by the financ...
Develops the basic analysis of transfers when there are two economic agents (countries) engaged in t...
We revisit the classic transfer problem, accounting for two channels of adjustment: increased trade ...
The paper examines the effects of tied-aid on the welfare of both the donor and the recipient countr...