This paper examines how a government should intervene when agents make choices having long-term detrimental effects on their life expectancy. For that purpose, we consider an economy where some agents consume a sin good (reducing their survival chances) out of myopia, and regret their choices later on, whereas other agents make, because of their impatience, the same risky choices, which they never regret. We argue that, in the first-best, a government should only interfere with behaviors that agents will regret, but not with other behaviors. In the second-best, asymmetric information and redistributive concerns imply interferences not only with myopic behaviors, but also with impatience-based (rational) behaviors. Finally, we introduce hete...
We study optimal taxation when consumers have temptation and self-control problems. Embedding the cl...
In a setting in which an agent has a behavioral bias that causes an underestimation or an overestima...
This paper applies the analytical tools of optimal taxation theory to the design of the optimal subs...
This paper examines how a government should intervene when agents make choices having long-term detr...
This paper examines how a government should intervene when agents make choices having long-term detr...
This paper examines how a government should intervene when agents make, for different reasons, choic...
This paper analyzes the pattern of consumption taxes in a two period model with habit formation and ...
In this paper we examine the optimal policies for sin goods and health care in a two-period economy....
We consider a two-period model. In the first period, individuals consume two goods: one is sinful an...
This article aims to integrate temptation preferences into the theory of optimal taxation with heter...
In this Essay I review six behavioral challenges to optimal savings at the individual and collective...
This paper reviews a number of recent contributions that study pension design with myopic individual...
This paper derives the optimal pension and tax parameters in a society where individuals differ in t...
This paper shows that the combination of habit formation – present consumption creating additional c...
We study optimal taxation when consumers have temptation and self-control problems. Embedding the cl...
In a setting in which an agent has a behavioral bias that causes an underestimation or an overestima...
This paper applies the analytical tools of optimal taxation theory to the design of the optimal subs...
This paper examines how a government should intervene when agents make choices having long-term detr...
This paper examines how a government should intervene when agents make choices having long-term detr...
This paper examines how a government should intervene when agents make, for different reasons, choic...
This paper analyzes the pattern of consumption taxes in a two period model with habit formation and ...
In this paper we examine the optimal policies for sin goods and health care in a two-period economy....
We consider a two-period model. In the first period, individuals consume two goods: one is sinful an...
This article aims to integrate temptation preferences into the theory of optimal taxation with heter...
In this Essay I review six behavioral challenges to optimal savings at the individual and collective...
This paper reviews a number of recent contributions that study pension design with myopic individual...
This paper derives the optimal pension and tax parameters in a society where individuals differ in t...
This paper shows that the combination of habit formation – present consumption creating additional c...
We study optimal taxation when consumers have temptation and self-control problems. Embedding the cl...
In a setting in which an agent has a behavioral bias that causes an underestimation or an overestima...
This paper applies the analytical tools of optimal taxation theory to the design of the optimal subs...