We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of labor, following a change in relative prices. We consider two extreme cases, in which the government has either unlimited or negligible ability to commit to future actions. We explain why the ability to make commitments may be unimportant, and we illustrate this conjecture with numerical examples. For either assumption about commitment ability, the equilibrium policy involves gradual liberalization. The dying sector is protected during the transition to a free market, in order to decrease the amount of unemployment Our results are sensitive to the assumptions about migration
This paper proposes that reforms by vote-seeking governments and the existence of reform-adverse vot...
Dynamic collective decision making often entails inefficient policy choices and po-litical inertia. ...
International audienceThis paper builds a dynamic model of utility regulation where a government can...
We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of lab...
We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of lab...
We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of lab...
We study the dynamics of optimal trade policy in a model with costly inter-sectoral adjustment of la...
Lagged benefits relative to costs can politically block an efficiency-enhancing labor market reform,...
We characterize Markov-perfect equilibria in a setting where the absence of government com-mitment a...
Lagged benefits relative to costs can weaken the incentives to an efficiency-enhancing labor market ...
In this paper, we conduct a theoretical analysis of the implications of a union which can exploit th...
This paper shows that the toleration of immigrants who are on average less skilled than natives can ...
We characterize Markov-perfect equilibria in a setting where the absence of government com-mitment a...
This paper examines a class of interest rate rules, studied in Evans and Honkapohja (2003, 2006), th...
A Ramsey model for a two-sector economy, comprising a labour intensive non-traded sector and a capit...
This paper proposes that reforms by vote-seeking governments and the existence of reform-adverse vot...
Dynamic collective decision making often entails inefficient policy choices and po-litical inertia. ...
International audienceThis paper builds a dynamic model of utility regulation where a government can...
We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of lab...
We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of lab...
We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of lab...
We study the dynamics of optimal trade policy in a model with costly inter-sectoral adjustment of la...
Lagged benefits relative to costs can politically block an efficiency-enhancing labor market reform,...
We characterize Markov-perfect equilibria in a setting where the absence of government com-mitment a...
Lagged benefits relative to costs can weaken the incentives to an efficiency-enhancing labor market ...
In this paper, we conduct a theoretical analysis of the implications of a union which can exploit th...
This paper shows that the toleration of immigrants who are on average less skilled than natives can ...
We characterize Markov-perfect equilibria in a setting where the absence of government com-mitment a...
This paper examines a class of interest rate rules, studied in Evans and Honkapohja (2003, 2006), th...
A Ramsey model for a two-sector economy, comprising a labour intensive non-traded sector and a capit...
This paper proposes that reforms by vote-seeking governments and the existence of reform-adverse vot...
Dynamic collective decision making often entails inefficient policy choices and po-litical inertia. ...
International audienceThis paper builds a dynamic model of utility regulation where a government can...