Developing countries subsidise the tariffs of public utilities such as electricity or transportation with high costs in terms of the quality and sustainability of the utility provisions. Even when governments repeatedly claim that the main goal of these subsidies is to improve the well-being of the poor, most literature has explained the use of these tools is driven by income inequality rather than the poverty rate. In contrast, I study the effect of the size of the poor on the choice of the mix of regulation and other traditional forms of redistributive policy. I begin by showing that the poor are better characterised by their consumption bundle than their income. Consequently, when the public utilities are essential for the poor, a higher...
In Latin America, the relationship between income and support for redistribution is weak and variabl...
Subsidy policies on public urban transport have been adopted ubiquitously. Both in developed and dev...
We test a key assumption underlying seminal theories about preferences for redistribution, which is ...
Developing countries subsidise the tariffs of public utilities such as electricity or transportation...
In this thesis, I study the use of regulation as a redistributive policy and its implications on eco...
Subsidies to residential utility customers are popular among policy makers, utility managers, and ut...
We study the use of social expenditures and regulation for redistribution. When regulated goods are ...
Policymakers often consider temporarily redistributing income from rich to poor households to stimul...
Electricity and water are often subsidized in developing countries to increase their affordability f...
The paper examines empirically the question of whether more unequal societies spend more on income r...
Why have different industrialized capitalist market economies developed such varying systems for soc...
Poverty has a spatial component. There are not only impoverished people, but also impoverished place...
This article provides a simple framework to analyze the determinants of targeting performance of uti...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
We analyze the potential welfare effect of energy subsidy reforms. The income distributions of eleve...
In Latin America, the relationship between income and support for redistribution is weak and variabl...
Subsidy policies on public urban transport have been adopted ubiquitously. Both in developed and dev...
We test a key assumption underlying seminal theories about preferences for redistribution, which is ...
Developing countries subsidise the tariffs of public utilities such as electricity or transportation...
In this thesis, I study the use of regulation as a redistributive policy and its implications on eco...
Subsidies to residential utility customers are popular among policy makers, utility managers, and ut...
We study the use of social expenditures and regulation for redistribution. When regulated goods are ...
Policymakers often consider temporarily redistributing income from rich to poor households to stimul...
Electricity and water are often subsidized in developing countries to increase their affordability f...
The paper examines empirically the question of whether more unequal societies spend more on income r...
Why have different industrialized capitalist market economies developed such varying systems for soc...
Poverty has a spatial component. There are not only impoverished people, but also impoverished place...
This article provides a simple framework to analyze the determinants of targeting performance of uti...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
We analyze the potential welfare effect of energy subsidy reforms. The income distributions of eleve...
In Latin America, the relationship between income and support for redistribution is weak and variabl...
Subsidy policies on public urban transport have been adopted ubiquitously. Both in developed and dev...
We test a key assumption underlying seminal theories about preferences for redistribution, which is ...