330 research outputs found
Evaluation of Dutch election programs: The impact of parameter uncertainty
Shortly before the national elections in the Netherlands, the Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis (CPB) evaluates the economic effects of the policy proposals in election programs. This paper investigates the sensitivity of this analysis to the uncertainty of parameter estimates in the economic models that are used. For this purpose, a Monte Carlo analysis of five election programs is performed, using a core version of one of the CPB models. We find that the range of projected outcomes is surprisingly small. Nonetheless, caution remains needed, especially when the estimated effects of different parties are roughly similar.Model simulation; policy evaluation; parameter uncertainty; CGE models
Tax Reform and the Dutch Labor Market: An Applied General Equilibrium Approach
This paper employs MIMIC, an applied general equilibrium model of the Dutch economy, to explore various tax cuts aimed at combating unemployment and raising labor supply. MIMIC combines modern labor-market theories, a firm empirical foundation detailed description of Dutch labor-market institutions. We develop a small aggregate model which contains the core of MIMIC, namely wage setting, job matching, labor supply demand. In addition to illustrating the main economic mechanisms in MIMIC shows the advantages of employing a larger, more disaggregated model that accounts for heterogeneity, institutional details, and more economic mechanisms. Targeting in-work benefits at the low skilled is the most effective way to cut economy-wide unemployment quality and quantity of labor supply. Cuts in social security contributions paid by employers and subsidies for hiring long-term unemployed reduce unskilled unemployment most substantially. Tax cuts in the higher tax brackets boost the quantity and quality of formal labor supply but are less effective in reducing unemployment and in raising unskilled employment and female labor supply.
Evaluation of Dutch election programs: The impact of parameter uncertainty
Shortly before the national elections in the Netherlands, the Netherlands Bureau for
Economic Policy Analysis (CPB) evaluates the economic effects of the policy proposals in
election programs. This paper investigates the sensitivity of this analysis to the uncertainty
of parameter estimates in the economic models that are used. For this purpose, a Monte
Carlo analysis of five election programs is performed, using a core version of one of the
CPB models. We find that the range of projected outcomes is surprisingly small.
Nonetheless, caution remains needed, especially when the estimated effects of different
parties are roughly similar
Evaluation of Dutch election programs: The impact of parameter uncertainty
Shortly before the national elections in the Netherlands, the Netherlands Bureau for
Economic Policy Analysis (CPB) evaluates the economic effects of the policy proposals in
election programs. This paper investigates the sensitivity of this analysis to the uncertainty
of parameter estimates in the economic models that are used. For this purpose, a Monte
Carlo analysis of five election programs is performed, using a core version of one of the
CPB models. We find that the range of projected outcomes is surprisingly small.
Nonetheless, caution remains needed, especially when the estimated effects of different
parties are roughly similar
Reciprocity as a foundation of financial economics
This paper argues that the subsistence of the fundamental theorem of contemporary financial mathematics is the ethical concept ‘reciprocity’. The argument is based on identifying an equivalence between the contemporary, and ostensibly ‘value neutral’, Fundamental Theory of Asset Pricing with theories of mathematical probability that emerged in the seventeenth century in the context of the ethical assessment of commercial contracts in a framework of Aristotelian ethics. This observation, the main claim of the paper, is justified on the basis of results from the Ultimatum Game and is analysed within a framework of Pragmatic philosophy. The analysis leads to the explanatory hypothesis that markets are centres of communicative action with reciprocity as a rule of discourse. The purpose of the paper is to reorientate financial economics to emphasise the objectives of cooperation and social cohesion and to this end, we offer specific policy advice
- …