This paper examines government subsidies that prevent unlucky firms from going out of business. Subsidies can save jobs and prevent an increase in unemployment insurance expenditures, but they modify the incentives of the firms to exert adequate effort. If firms expect to obtain help, they may not undertake enough effort to decrease the probability of needing help. The cost-minimizing government must therefore trade off the savings in unemployment insurance expenditures against the increased bill in subsidies to the firms. The analysis shows that this trade-off is significantly affected by the level of commitment of the government; if the government cannot commit to a future subsidy policy, the level of subsidies will be unambiguously highe...
This paper deals with the impact of social contributions and tax cuts (which are considered as opera...
We examine, theoretically, the impact of government subsidies on the value of the firm
© 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York. This paper analyzes the effects of an investment s...
This paper examines who receives direct government subsidy when a firm faces delisting risk and how ...
This paper evaluates the impact of varying subsidy sizes and distinct program objectives on firm siz...
This paper links the old literature on employment subsidies with the current theories of contract an...
We construct a simple career concerns model where high-powered incentives can distort the compositio...
This paper consider equity vs. efficiency in a small economy that subsidizes an industry facing fall...
This paper shows that the impact of targeted employment subsidies depends not only on the subsidy ra...
We explore the effects of subsidies by means of a model of firms' decisions about performing R&D whe...
This paper examines the optimality of export subsidies in oligopolistic markets, when home and forei...
In the presence of home firm's ability to make a cost-reducing investment before or after the govern...
This paper investigates how the possibility of government subsidies to firms affects lending and man...
This paper examines the optimality of export subsidies in oligopolistic markets, when home and forei...
This paper examines who receives government subsidies when a firm faces delisting risk and how subsi...
This paper deals with the impact of social contributions and tax cuts (which are considered as opera...
We examine, theoretically, the impact of government subsidies on the value of the firm
© 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York. This paper analyzes the effects of an investment s...
This paper examines who receives direct government subsidy when a firm faces delisting risk and how ...
This paper evaluates the impact of varying subsidy sizes and distinct program objectives on firm siz...
This paper links the old literature on employment subsidies with the current theories of contract an...
We construct a simple career concerns model where high-powered incentives can distort the compositio...
This paper consider equity vs. efficiency in a small economy that subsidizes an industry facing fall...
This paper shows that the impact of targeted employment subsidies depends not only on the subsidy ra...
We explore the effects of subsidies by means of a model of firms' decisions about performing R&D whe...
This paper examines the optimality of export subsidies in oligopolistic markets, when home and forei...
In the presence of home firm's ability to make a cost-reducing investment before or after the govern...
This paper investigates how the possibility of government subsidies to firms affects lending and man...
This paper examines the optimality of export subsidies in oligopolistic markets, when home and forei...
This paper examines who receives government subsidies when a firm faces delisting risk and how subsi...
This paper deals with the impact of social contributions and tax cuts (which are considered as opera...
We examine, theoretically, the impact of government subsidies on the value of the firm
© 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York. This paper analyzes the effects of an investment s...