Three essay on the sectoral aspects of economic policy

In this dissertation, I study the implications of policies with heterogeneous sectoral impacts in three research fields of macroeconomics: (i) environmental policy, (ii) foreign aid and (iii) the political economy of the twin deficits. In the first chapter, the distributional impact of a pollution tax is studied by considering a society in which wealth is distributed heterogeneously among households. We present a model in which firms can use dirty and clean technologies. If the dirty technology is capital intensive, pollution tax leads to a reallocation of production factors towards the clean... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Arabzadeh, Hamzeh
Dokumenttyp: doctoralThesis
Erscheinungsdatum: 2016
Schlagwörter: Heterogeneity in wealth / Current account imbalances / Foreign aid / Wage bargaining centralization / Real exchange rate / Pollution tax / Endogenous growth / Search and matching frictions / Dutch disease / Learning-by-doing / Twin deficits
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29033958
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/178241

In this dissertation, I study the implications of policies with heterogeneous sectoral impacts in three research fields of macroeconomics: (i) environmental policy, (ii) foreign aid and (iii) the political economy of the twin deficits. In the first chapter, the distributional impact of a pollution tax is studied by considering a society in which wealth is distributed heterogeneously among households. We present a model in which firms can use dirty and clean technologies. If the dirty technology is capital intensive, pollution tax leads to a reallocation of production factors towards the clean technology, changing the factor prices in favor of workers. Hence, richer people, owning a larger share of capital, support less the pollution tax. In the second chapter, I study the macroeconomic impacts of foreign aid. I consider two sectors: tradable (T-sector) and non-tradable sector (N-sector). I consider two forms of aid: (i) aid which is transferred to households and (ii) aid which is used to finance public investment. I investigate the impact of the liberalization of capital market on the optimal form and on the performance of foreign aid. In the third chapter, I study the impact of wage centralization on the political economy of the twin deficits. Econometric analysis of the paper finds evidence that wage centralization, in a cross-section of industrialized economies, is significantly associated with lower deficits in current account and budget balance. This chapter provides a political economy framework to explain this empirical finding. ; (ECGE - Sciences économiques et de gestion) -- UCL, 2016