There is widespread concern that greater mobility of individuals can undermine any attempt to redistribute income at the local level. In this paper we derive the equilibrium level of redistribution when both the rich and the poor are imperfectly mobile and when each jurisdiction chooses its redistributive policy by majority voting. This leads to a fundamental interaction whereby the policy choices of jurisdictions determine whom they attract and where whom they attract determines their policy choices. Our main findings are twofold. First, we show that greater mobility of the poor can increase the equilibrium amount of redistribution. Second, we find that some jurisdictions can be in equilibrium on the “wrong” side of their Laffer curve. The...
This paper sheds light on the relationship between income inequality and redistributive policies and...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequality matte...
Mobility may undermine local income redistribution in federal systems, because rich taxpayers can ev...
We explore the possibility for decentralized redistribution consid-ering a tax competition model whe...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...
The paper considers a two-community model with freely mobile individuals. Individuals differ not onl...
Just like economists, voters have conflicting views about redistributive taxation because they estim...
The poor favour redistribution and the rich oppose it, but that is not all. Social mobility may make...
Abstract. This paper surveys models of voting on redistribution. Under reason-able assumptions, the ...
Mobility may undermine local income redistribution in federal systems, because rich taxpayers can ev...
This paper presents a simple model that displays a joint determination of income inequality and inte...
This paper sheds light on the relationship between income inequality and redistributive policies and...
We explore the effect of income mobility and the persistence of redistributive tax policy on the lev...
We explore the effect of income mobility and the persistence of redistributive tax policy on the lev...
This paper sheds light on the relationship between income inequality and redistributive policies and...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequality matte...
Mobility may undermine local income redistribution in federal systems, because rich taxpayers can ev...
We explore the possibility for decentralized redistribution consid-ering a tax competition model whe...
Why are governments elected by proportional representation more prone to redistribute income than th...
The paper considers a two-community model with freely mobile individuals. Individuals differ not onl...
Just like economists, voters have conflicting views about redistributive taxation because they estim...
The poor favour redistribution and the rich oppose it, but that is not all. Social mobility may make...
Abstract. This paper surveys models of voting on redistribution. Under reason-able assumptions, the ...
Mobility may undermine local income redistribution in federal systems, because rich taxpayers can ev...
This paper presents a simple model that displays a joint determination of income inequality and inte...
This paper sheds light on the relationship between income inequality and redistributive policies and...
We explore the effect of income mobility and the persistence of redistributive tax policy on the lev...
We explore the effect of income mobility and the persistence of redistributive tax policy on the lev...
This paper sheds light on the relationship between income inequality and redistributive policies and...
This paper proposes an explanation for why universal suffrage has not implied larger rich-to-poor tr...
Against the current consensus among comparative political economists, we argue that inequality matte...