5.00 credits
30.0 h
Q2
Teacher(s)
Hindriks Jean;
Language
English
Main themes
Part 1 Political economy and public sector
1. Voting
2. Rent seeking and lobbying
Part 2 Equity and Redistribution
3. Inequality and poverty
Part 3 Taxation
4. Commodity taxation
5. Income taxation
Part 4 Multiple jurisdictions
6. Fiscal federalism
7. tax competition
Part 5 Issue of time
8. Intertemporal efficiency
9. Social security and pension crisis
Learning outcomes
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
1 | This course is essentially an evaluation of the role of the public sector in a market economy. The course will use the most recent economic analysis to (re)consider the efficiency and distributive ef-fects of government intervention. The optimal design of government intervention both in terms of public expenditures and tax collection is also studied. The main objective of the course is to strike a balance between political and market failures in determining the form and the extent of government intervention. Students taking this course will acquire: 1 An understanding of the design of public spending and tax collection; 2 An understanding of the tradeoff between equity and efficiency 3 The skill to apply economic analysis to the public sector |
Content
Public economics is about the government and the economic effects of its public policies. The course will offer some insights into what public economics says and what it can do including the most recent developments in behavioural public policy to deal with individual mistakes and the data revolution to track the impact of public policy with application to recent tax reforms on soda drink and electricity market. On the policy side the course will discuss the pension crisis (using the professor’s experience in the pension reform commission) and the unequal opportunity in education (based on the PISA tests).
This course is essentially an evaluation of the role of the public sector in a market economy. The course will use the most recent economic analysis to (re)consider the efficiency and distributive effects of public intervention in the economy. The optimal design of public intervention with special attention to implementation and politics.
This course is essentially an evaluation of the role of the public sector in a market economy. The course will use the most recent economic analysis to (re)consider the efficiency and distributive effects of public intervention in the economy. The optimal design of public intervention with special attention to implementation and politics.
Teaching methods
Teaching is by one two-hour lecture every week which will present the core material. Fortnightly tutorials will consist in solving problems. This should help to develop students' skill and agility in public economics as well as to check their understanding of the course. The course is divided in two parts. In part 1 we analyse the method of public economics, behavioral public policy, Tax incidence with application to electricity tax and soda tax, Rent seeking and lobbying, and sustainable debt. Part 1 will conclude with a group work.In part 2, we study intergenerational public policy with two applications: pensions and education. We study the pension in theory and the pension reform in practice. We discuss different measures of social mobility and inequality in education. We relate unequal school opportunity to intergenerational income transmission. The Part 2 concludes with a group work on pension reform for a specific country.
Evaluation methods
Final grade is based on a closed book written exam (60%), group work (25%) and tutorials (15%).
Other information
Students can choose to register to only Part 1 (first term of Q2) or Part 2 (second term of Q2).
Bibliography
Public economics:
Hindriks and Myles " Intermediate Public Economics " MIT Press 2006
Hashimzade, Hindriks, and Myles "Solutions manual to Accompany Intermediate Public Economics" MIT press 2006.
Political economy:
Bueno de Mesquita, Political Economy for Public Policy, Princeton University Press 2016
Dowling, Patashnik, and Gerber, Unhealthy Politics, Princeton University Press 2017
General interest:
Banerjee and Duflo, “Good Economics for Hard Times” Public affairs, November 2019.
Hindriks and Myles " Intermediate Public Economics " MIT Press 2006
Hashimzade, Hindriks, and Myles "Solutions manual to Accompany Intermediate Public Economics" MIT press 2006.
Political economy:
Bueno de Mesquita, Political Economy for Public Policy, Princeton University Press 2016
Dowling, Patashnik, and Gerber, Unhealthy Politics, Princeton University Press 2017
General interest:
Banerjee and Duflo, “Good Economics for Hard Times” Public affairs, November 2019.
Faculty or entity
ECON