We consider a one-sector growth model in continuous time with a production externality and endogenous labor supply. There is a continuum of households who have identical preferences but differ with respect to their initial wealth. We show that there exist economies such that an indeterminate steady state exists for some wealth distribution but not for others. A second result is that a redistribution of wealth may drive the economy from a steady state with strictly positive output to a poverty trap in which output converges asymptotically to zero. These results indicate that differences in the wealth distribution may be responsible for drastic differences in the long-run standard of living
In the framework of a one-sector exogenous growth model we show that consumption externalities are n...
This paper extends the findings in Chen and Lee (2007) to show that the use of congestible public go...
textabstractEndogenous population growth, i.e., making the rate of population growth dependent on so...
∗The authors thank Paulo Brito and an anonymous referee for their constructive comments on an earlie...
We study the e®ect of endogenous time preference in a simple neo-classical model of growth. The vari...
Recent macroeconomic models of income distribution generate equilibria characterized as poverty trap...
We introduce endogenous probability of survival in the Keynes-Ramsey optimal growth model. An indivi...
This paper investigates the evolution of wealth distribution in a one sector growth model along its ...
This paper investigates the evolution of wealth distribution in a one sector growth model along its ...
We study the intergenerational transmission of inequality using a model in which parents can make bo...
In this paper we use global analysis techniques to analyze an economic growth model with environment...
Abstract: We examine the evolution of the distributions of wealth and income in a Ramsey model in wh...
In this paper, we analyze the emergence and persistence of poverty traps and study how wide-spread p...
This paper combines two strands of the literature on inequality and distribution issues: the classic...
We extend the dynamic Heckscher-Ohlin model in Bond et al. (2009) and show that if the labor intensi...
In the framework of a one-sector exogenous growth model we show that consumption externalities are n...
This paper extends the findings in Chen and Lee (2007) to show that the use of congestible public go...
textabstractEndogenous population growth, i.e., making the rate of population growth dependent on so...
∗The authors thank Paulo Brito and an anonymous referee for their constructive comments on an earlie...
We study the e®ect of endogenous time preference in a simple neo-classical model of growth. The vari...
Recent macroeconomic models of income distribution generate equilibria characterized as poverty trap...
We introduce endogenous probability of survival in the Keynes-Ramsey optimal growth model. An indivi...
This paper investigates the evolution of wealth distribution in a one sector growth model along its ...
This paper investigates the evolution of wealth distribution in a one sector growth model along its ...
We study the intergenerational transmission of inequality using a model in which parents can make bo...
In this paper we use global analysis techniques to analyze an economic growth model with environment...
Abstract: We examine the evolution of the distributions of wealth and income in a Ramsey model in wh...
In this paper, we analyze the emergence and persistence of poverty traps and study how wide-spread p...
This paper combines two strands of the literature on inequality and distribution issues: the classic...
We extend the dynamic Heckscher-Ohlin model in Bond et al. (2009) and show that if the labor intensi...
In the framework of a one-sector exogenous growth model we show that consumption externalities are n...
This paper extends the findings in Chen and Lee (2007) to show that the use of congestible public go...
textabstractEndogenous population growth, i.e., making the rate of population growth dependent on so...