Within an R&D-driven growth model, this paper studies how an environmental tax and its cost both for firms and consumers affect individuals’ incentives for human capital accumulation, income inequality, and the per capita growth rate. The results show that when a low share of the environmental tax on consumption is levied, a tighter environmental tax results in an increase in individuals’ human capital accumulation and income inequality between both unskilled and skilled workers and among skilled workers and spurs the per capita growth rate. A numerical simulation for the U.S. economy illustrates the results and shows that the increase in income inequality is very modest compared to the large increase in the per capita output growth rat...
Several recent papers addressing the role of income distribution in the growth process have focused ...
We examine the relationship between economic growth, tax policy, and distribution of capital and lab...
Growth-inequality relationship is reexamined in a neo-classical growth model with discrete occupatio...
Within an R&D-driven growth model, this paper studies how an environmental tax and its cost both...
Within an R&D-driven endogenous growth model, this paper studies the effects of carbon pricing o...
We investigate how reduction of income inequality through tax policy affects economic growth. Taxati...
This paper analyzes the economic implications of an environmental policy when we account for the lif...
Higher child mortality reduces the willingness of parents to invest in children’s education and keep...
Environmental innovations heavily depend on government policies and consumers' behaviour. This paper...
We analyze how, in representative democracies, income distribution influences the stringency of envi...
This paper examines the implications of an environmental policy for growth performances. We develop ...
International audienceThe present paper adopts a Yaari (Rev Econ Stud 32:137–150, 1965) and Blanchar...
This paper analyzes the economic implications of an environmental policy when we take into account t...
This article challenges the conventional result that a tighter environmental tax has no long-run eff...
This article challenges the conventional result that a tighter environmental tax has no long-run eff...
Several recent papers addressing the role of income distribution in the growth process have focused ...
We examine the relationship between economic growth, tax policy, and distribution of capital and lab...
Growth-inequality relationship is reexamined in a neo-classical growth model with discrete occupatio...
Within an R&D-driven growth model, this paper studies how an environmental tax and its cost both...
Within an R&D-driven endogenous growth model, this paper studies the effects of carbon pricing o...
We investigate how reduction of income inequality through tax policy affects economic growth. Taxati...
This paper analyzes the economic implications of an environmental policy when we account for the lif...
Higher child mortality reduces the willingness of parents to invest in children’s education and keep...
Environmental innovations heavily depend on government policies and consumers' behaviour. This paper...
We analyze how, in representative democracies, income distribution influences the stringency of envi...
This paper examines the implications of an environmental policy for growth performances. We develop ...
International audienceThe present paper adopts a Yaari (Rev Econ Stud 32:137–150, 1965) and Blanchar...
This paper analyzes the economic implications of an environmental policy when we take into account t...
This article challenges the conventional result that a tighter environmental tax has no long-run eff...
This article challenges the conventional result that a tighter environmental tax has no long-run eff...
Several recent papers addressing the role of income distribution in the growth process have focused ...
We examine the relationship between economic growth, tax policy, and distribution of capital and lab...
Growth-inequality relationship is reexamined in a neo-classical growth model with discrete occupatio...