The paper links the intensity of re-distributional activities within an economy to the availability of the input markets. When an individual is faced with a choice between productive vs non-productive (re-distributional) activities, the outcome heavily depends on whether this individual can match his/her personal endowment of human resources (labor, entrepreneurial talent, skills etc.) with commensurable quantities of transferable economic inputs, which are required to complement the human resources in production technologies. If the markets for these inputs are missed or impeded, rational individuals could be forced into re-distribution, where "technologies" do not require matching inputs. However, the development of the input markets alo...
Many models show that redistribution is bad for growth. This paper argues that in a non-cooperative ...
Although the importance of property rights as the engine of growth remains beyond dispute, this arti...
In recent empirical work, institutions have been shown to explain a significant share of the differe...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the impact that property rights exert on income i...
This paper discusses how economic systems can be described by the manner that property rights are al...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
Abstract In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution ca...
This paper analyzes the dynamic emergence of property rights in a decentralized economy devoid of an...
The appeal of using markets as a means of allocating scarce resources stems in large part from the a...
Economic theorists have often expressed doubts as to the extent of property rights beyond the materi...
It is often argued that additional checks and balances provide economic agents with better protectio...
Abstract In unequal societies, the rich may benefit from shaping economic institutions in their favo...
If, as Hume argues, property is a self-referring custom of a group of people, then property rights d...
Abstract This paper studies the relationship between political wealth redistribu-tion and the alloca...
Many models show that redistribution is bad for growth. This paper argues that in a non-cooperative ...
Although the importance of property rights as the engine of growth remains beyond dispute, this arti...
In recent empirical work, institutions have been shown to explain a significant share of the differe...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the impact that property rights exert on income i...
This paper discusses how economic systems can be described by the manner that property rights are al...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
Abstract In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution ca...
This paper analyzes the dynamic emergence of property rights in a decentralized economy devoid of an...
The appeal of using markets as a means of allocating scarce resources stems in large part from the a...
Economic theorists have often expressed doubts as to the extent of property rights beyond the materi...
It is often argued that additional checks and balances provide economic agents with better protectio...
Abstract In unequal societies, the rich may benefit from shaping economic institutions in their favo...
If, as Hume argues, property is a self-referring custom of a group of people, then property rights d...
Abstract This paper studies the relationship between political wealth redistribu-tion and the alloca...
Many models show that redistribution is bad for growth. This paper argues that in a non-cooperative ...
Although the importance of property rights as the engine of growth remains beyond dispute, this arti...
In recent empirical work, institutions have been shown to explain a significant share of the differe...