In this paper, we introduce a unified Ramsey model where pollution has an impact on preferences and affects both consumption demand and labor supply. Pollution comes from production activities and is viewed as a stock variable with a strong inertia. A government is introduced and levies a proportional tax on production to finance depollution expenditure. We find two interesting results when pollution raises the consumption demand (compensation effect). First, in the long run, a higher green-tax rate increases the pollution level at the steady state (green paradox) when pollution raises the labor supply (disenchantment effect). Second, in the short run, local indeterminacy can arise through a Hopf bifurcation when pollution lowers the labor ...
International audienceWe study the effects of an economic policy in an endogenous growth general equ...
The paper discusses questions resulting from a study of the interaction of a change of preferences a...
We derive conditions on individual preferences and technology that give rise to a negative correlati...
In this paper, we introduce a unified Ramsey model where pollution has an impact on preferences and ...
In this paper, we introduce a unified Ramsey model where pollution has an impact on preferences and ...
International audienceRecent empirical contributions have observed a significant negative impact of ...
In this paper, we investigate the impact of redistribution and polluting commodity taxation on inequ...
International audienceIn this article, we embed a model of disease spread into a Ramsey model. A sto...
In this paper, we study a competitive economy where a pollution externality, coming from production,...
We build a general equilibrium dynamic model in which individual investors are endowed with “warm-gl...
summary: this paper examines how the effect of pollution on production processes is relevant to the ...
International audienceSince Heal (Explorations in natural resource economics. The Johns Hopkins Univ...
International audienceSince Heal (Explorations in natural resource economics. The Johns Hopkins Univ...
We study the distributional effects of a pollution tax in general equilibrium, with general forms of...
The current paper offers a new explanation on the emergence of threshold effects and multiple equili...
International audienceWe study the effects of an economic policy in an endogenous growth general equ...
The paper discusses questions resulting from a study of the interaction of a change of preferences a...
We derive conditions on individual preferences and technology that give rise to a negative correlati...
In this paper, we introduce a unified Ramsey model where pollution has an impact on preferences and ...
In this paper, we introduce a unified Ramsey model where pollution has an impact on preferences and ...
International audienceRecent empirical contributions have observed a significant negative impact of ...
In this paper, we investigate the impact of redistribution and polluting commodity taxation on inequ...
International audienceIn this article, we embed a model of disease spread into a Ramsey model. A sto...
In this paper, we study a competitive economy where a pollution externality, coming from production,...
We build a general equilibrium dynamic model in which individual investors are endowed with “warm-gl...
summary: this paper examines how the effect of pollution on production processes is relevant to the ...
International audienceSince Heal (Explorations in natural resource economics. The Johns Hopkins Univ...
International audienceSince Heal (Explorations in natural resource economics. The Johns Hopkins Univ...
We study the distributional effects of a pollution tax in general equilibrium, with general forms of...
The current paper offers a new explanation on the emergence of threshold effects and multiple equili...
International audienceWe study the effects of an economic policy in an endogenous growth general equ...
The paper discusses questions resulting from a study of the interaction of a change of preferences a...
We derive conditions on individual preferences and technology that give rise to a negative correlati...