This paper provides an analysis of the social consequences of people seeking to keep up with the Joneses. All individuals attempt to reach a higher rank than the Joneses, including the Joneses themselves. This attitude gives rise to an equilibrium in which all individuals have equal utilities but unequal (gross) incomes. Due to a rat-race effect, individuals devote too much energy to climbing the social scale in this equilibrium. However, laissez-faire equilibrium is an equal-utility constrained social optimum. Unexpectedly, numerical simulations show that this theory could account for the observed distribution of intermediate wages
In this paper, we investigate whether, because of differing social organisation, the effect of great...
International audienceThis paper examines how the interplay between economic incentives and social p...
Consider two principles for social evaluation. The first, ‘laissez-faire’, says that mean-preservin...
This paper provides an analysis of the social consequences of people seeking to keep up with the Jon...
Revised version of "On the equilibrium and welfare consequences of Keeping Up with the JonesesIntern...
We study a variant of the conventional keeping-up-with-the-Joneses setup in which heterogeneous-abil...
We study a variant of the conventional keeping-up-with-the-Joneses setup in which heterogeneous-abil...
In a status game, homogenous individuals first decide on their income (and on the effort necessary t...
This paper investigates how well-being varies with individual wage rates when individuals care about...
AbstractWhen individuals compare themselves to those with the same wage-rate, status concerns–Keepin...
This paper investigates how well-being varies with individual wage rates when individuals care about...
This paper investigates how well-being varies with individual wage rates when individuals care about...
This paper studies the fight-or-flight ambivalence people showtowards the success of the proverbial ...
This paper considers the effects of changes in the income distribution in an economy where agents ’ ...
Recent research on inequality, in particular as put forward by Brock and Durlauf (2000 a,b) and Durl...
In this paper, we investigate whether, because of differing social organisation, the effect of great...
International audienceThis paper examines how the interplay between economic incentives and social p...
Consider two principles for social evaluation. The first, ‘laissez-faire’, says that mean-preservin...
This paper provides an analysis of the social consequences of people seeking to keep up with the Jon...
Revised version of "On the equilibrium and welfare consequences of Keeping Up with the JonesesIntern...
We study a variant of the conventional keeping-up-with-the-Joneses setup in which heterogeneous-abil...
We study a variant of the conventional keeping-up-with-the-Joneses setup in which heterogeneous-abil...
In a status game, homogenous individuals first decide on their income (and on the effort necessary t...
This paper investigates how well-being varies with individual wage rates when individuals care about...
AbstractWhen individuals compare themselves to those with the same wage-rate, status concerns–Keepin...
This paper investigates how well-being varies with individual wage rates when individuals care about...
This paper investigates how well-being varies with individual wage rates when individuals care about...
This paper studies the fight-or-flight ambivalence people showtowards the success of the proverbial ...
This paper considers the effects of changes in the income distribution in an economy where agents ’ ...
Recent research on inequality, in particular as put forward by Brock and Durlauf (2000 a,b) and Durl...
In this paper, we investigate whether, because of differing social organisation, the effect of great...
International audienceThis paper examines how the interplay between economic incentives and social p...
Consider two principles for social evaluation. The first, ‘laissez-faire’, says that mean-preservin...