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A Simple and Flexible Alternative to Stability and Growth Pact Deficit Ceilings: Is it at Hand?

TLDR
In this article, the authors model a monetary union where fiscal discretion generates excessive debt accumulation in steady state and inefficiently delayed debt adjustment following shocks, and call for more focused supervision tasks for the European Commission and for parliamentary discussion whenever a disagreement arises between the Commission and a national government.
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This article is published in European Journal of Political Economy.The article was published on 2012-03-01 and is currently open access. It has received 66 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Debt adjustment & Stability and Growth Pact.

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Business cycles, unemployment insurance, and the calibration of matching models

TL;DR: The authors theoretically and empirically document a puzzle that arises when an RBC economy with a job matching function is used to model unemployment, and show that either sticky wages or match-specific productivity shocks can improve the model's performance by making the firm's flow of surplus more procyclical.
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Imitation—theory and experimental evidence

TL;DR: In this paper, a generalized theoretical approach to study imitation and subject it to rigorous experimental testing is introduced and the authors find that the different predictions of previous imitation models are mainly explained by different informational assumptions, and to a lesser extent by different behavioral rules.
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From the Tallest to (One of) the Fattest: The Enigmatic Fate of the American Population in the 20th Century

TL;DR: The hypothesis is worth considering that this adverse development is related to the greater social inequality, an inferior health care system, and fewer social safety nets in the United States than in Western and Northern Europe, in spite of higher per capita income.
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Patent Pools and Cross-Licensing in the Shadow of Patent Litigation*

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a framework to analyze the incentives to form a patent pool or engage in cross-licensing arrangements in the presence of uncertainty about the validity and coverage of patents that makes disputes inevitable.
Posted Content

Is There a European Business Cycle

TL;DR: This paper examined the identity and development of the European business cycle using quarterly GDP data for some 30 years up to and including 2001, and concluded that it is quite hard to discern a homogeneous or developing "European cycle" with these data.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Positive Theory of Fiscal Deficits and Government Debt

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider an economy in which policymakers with different preferences alternate in office as a result of elections, and the equilibrium level of debt is larger the larger is the degree of polarization between alternating governments and the less likely it is that the current government will be re-elected.
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Redistributive taxation in a simple perfect foresight model

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the potential of capital taxation in an intertemporal maximizing model of capital formation and show that under any convergent redistributive tax policy which maximizes a Paretian social objective, the capital income tax will converge to zero.
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Why a Stubborn Conservative would Run a Deficit: Policy with Time-Inconsistent Preferences

TL;DR: The authors show that the resulting level of public consumption is in between the levels the two governments would choose if each were in power both in the present and in the future, if the conservative government is more stubborn (in a particular sense) than the succeeding government.
ReportDOI

Interest-Rate Rules in an Estimated Sticky Price Model

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate alternative rules by which the Fed may set interest rates using the small model of the U.S. economy estimated in Rotemberg and Woodford (1997).
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Fiscal expansions and adjustments in OECD countries

TL;DR: Alesina and Perotti as discussed by the authors showed that large fiscal expansions typically occur through increases in expenditure, while large fiscal adjustments rely on tax increases, and that permanent improvements in the fiscal balance crucially differ from fiscal adjustments that lead to a temporary improvement and are reversed in a short time.
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Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "A simple and flexible alternative to the stability and growth pact deficit ceilings. is it at hand?" ?

The authors use a simple theoretical model of a monetary union where myopic discretionary fiscal policies generate excessive debt accumulation in steady state and inefficiently delayed debt adjustment following a shock. By setting a long-term debt target and by raising the political cost associated to deviations from the optimal pace of debt reversal following a shock ̧ institutional design induces the fiscal policymaker to implement unbiased discretionary responses to shocks. This is a completely revised version of CESifo Working Paper n. 1006. The authors wish to thank for very useful comments Enzo Dia and Jacques Melitz. 

21 Note that 0ˆ/1ˆ is a necessary condition for stability, and that the stability condition r 1ˆ can be reinterpreted as a ceiling to the proportion of adjustment shifted onto the future.