Some bilingual societies exhibit a distribution of language skills that can- not be explained by economic theories that portray languages as pure communication devices. Such distribution of skills are typically the result of public policies that promote bilingualism among members of both speech communities (reciprocal bilingualism). In this paper I argue that these policies are likely to increase social welfare by diminishing economic and social segmentation between the two communities. However, these gains tend to be unequally distributed over the two communities. As a result, in a large range of circumstances these policies might not draw sufficient support. The model is built upon the communicative value of languages, but also emphasizes...
The paper brings together methodological, theoretical, and empirical analysis into the single framew...
International audienceWe study the role played by bilinguals in competition between two languages an...
The world is full of situations of asymmetric bilingualism: the members of one linguistic group lear...
Some bilingual societies exhibit a distribution of language skills that can- not be explained by eco...
We examine patterns of acquiring non-native languages in a model with two languages and heterogenous...
In the present chapter, we seek to understand the actual social use bilinguals make of a minority la...
We examine patterns of acquiring non-native languages in a model with two languages and two populati...
In this paper we introduce a model of a society with two distinct linguistic groups, each consisting...
The economics of bilingualism belongs to the range of topics investigated in language economics. Lan...
This chapter studies multilingual democratic societies with highly developed economies. These societ...
Do languages matter beyond their communicative benefits? We explore the potential role of preference...
We study the language choice behavior of bilingual speakers in modern societies, such as the Basque...
Given the United States ’ increasingly multilingual population, it is important to understand clearl...
We investigate a society with two official languages: A, shared by all individuals and B, spoken by ...
In the earlier study “Code-Switching and the Optimal Grammar of Bilingual Language Use” in 2011, we ...
The paper brings together methodological, theoretical, and empirical analysis into the single framew...
International audienceWe study the role played by bilinguals in competition between two languages an...
The world is full of situations of asymmetric bilingualism: the members of one linguistic group lear...
Some bilingual societies exhibit a distribution of language skills that can- not be explained by eco...
We examine patterns of acquiring non-native languages in a model with two languages and heterogenous...
In the present chapter, we seek to understand the actual social use bilinguals make of a minority la...
We examine patterns of acquiring non-native languages in a model with two languages and two populati...
In this paper we introduce a model of a society with two distinct linguistic groups, each consisting...
The economics of bilingualism belongs to the range of topics investigated in language economics. Lan...
This chapter studies multilingual democratic societies with highly developed economies. These societ...
Do languages matter beyond their communicative benefits? We explore the potential role of preference...
We study the language choice behavior of bilingual speakers in modern societies, such as the Basque...
Given the United States ’ increasingly multilingual population, it is important to understand clearl...
We investigate a society with two official languages: A, shared by all individuals and B, spoken by ...
In the earlier study “Code-Switching and the Optimal Grammar of Bilingual Language Use” in 2011, we ...
The paper brings together methodological, theoretical, and empirical analysis into the single framew...
International audienceWe study the role played by bilinguals in competition between two languages an...
The world is full of situations of asymmetric bilingualism: the members of one linguistic group lear...