In Lucas and Stokey's (1983) economy, tax rates inherit the serial correlation structure of government expenditures, belying Barro's (1979) result that taxes should be a random walk for any stochastic process of government expenditures. To recover a version of Barro's `random walk' tax-smoothing outcome, we modify Lucas and Stokey's (1983) economy to permit only risk-free debt. Having only risk-free debt confronts the Ramsey planner with additional constraints on equilibrium allocations beyond one imposed by Lucas and Stokey's assumption of complete markets. The Ramsey outcome blends features of Barro's model with Lucas and Stokey's. In our model, the contemporaneous eects of exogenous government expe...
In this paper we examine how model uncertainty due to the preference for robustness (RB) affects opt...
We analyse the implications of optimal taxation for the stochastic behaviour of debt. We show that w...
This paper studies the role of asset-market completeness for the properties of optimal policy. A sui...
To recover a version of Barro's (1979) `random walk' tax smoothing outcome, we modify Luca...
This paper characterizes tax and debt dynamics in Ramsey plans for incomplete markets economies that...
Using a stochastic growth model we derive analytic expressions for optimal labour and capital tax ra...
Using a stochastic growth model subject to shocks to productivity, government expenditure and tastes...
This paper asks whether tax cycles can represent the optimal policy in a model without any extrinsic...
In models with a representative infinitely lived household, modern versions of tax smoothing imply t...
This paper studies optimal fiscal policy in an economy with heterogeneous households and incomplete ...
In models with a representative infinitely lived household, modern versions of tax smoothing imply t...
Empirical analyses of labor tax and public debt processes provide prima facie evidence for imperfect...
The Ramsey model of fiscal policy implies that taxes should be smooth in the sense of having small v...
In models with a representative infinitely lived household, tax smoothing implies that the steady st...
Empirical analyses of labor tax and public debt processes provide prima facie evidence for imperfect...
In this paper we examine how model uncertainty due to the preference for robustness (RB) affects opt...
We analyse the implications of optimal taxation for the stochastic behaviour of debt. We show that w...
This paper studies the role of asset-market completeness for the properties of optimal policy. A sui...
To recover a version of Barro's (1979) `random walk' tax smoothing outcome, we modify Luca...
This paper characterizes tax and debt dynamics in Ramsey plans for incomplete markets economies that...
Using a stochastic growth model we derive analytic expressions for optimal labour and capital tax ra...
Using a stochastic growth model subject to shocks to productivity, government expenditure and tastes...
This paper asks whether tax cycles can represent the optimal policy in a model without any extrinsic...
In models with a representative infinitely lived household, modern versions of tax smoothing imply t...
This paper studies optimal fiscal policy in an economy with heterogeneous households and incomplete ...
In models with a representative infinitely lived household, modern versions of tax smoothing imply t...
Empirical analyses of labor tax and public debt processes provide prima facie evidence for imperfect...
The Ramsey model of fiscal policy implies that taxes should be smooth in the sense of having small v...
In models with a representative infinitely lived household, tax smoothing implies that the steady st...
Empirical analyses of labor tax and public debt processes provide prima facie evidence for imperfect...
In this paper we examine how model uncertainty due to the preference for robustness (RB) affects opt...
We analyse the implications of optimal taxation for the stochastic behaviour of debt. We show that w...
This paper studies the role of asset-market completeness for the properties of optimal policy. A sui...