8,450 research outputs found

    Determinants of wages and labour supply in the UK

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    We explore characteristics of the UK labour market with special emphasis on explanation of the existing wage inequalities, determinants of participation and variation in the magnitude of hours of labour supplied among individuals. We explain up to 92 percent of variance in the wage rates from the supply side. Accuracy of the model is accounted by a variety of factors relevant to the labour market, such as gender gaps, marital status, on and off the job training, fluency in English and regional characteristics. The study is quite distinct, since it not only incorporates variables pertinent form the economic point of view, but also some quantified qualitative regressors relating to individuals’ opinions and political preferences. Interestingly, we find that the psychological profile of an individual has a very big influence over his decision on whether to participate, but once he joined the labour force his personal beliefs and opinions have no further impact on the probability of finding a job. The chance of being employed once participating depends mainly on the local labour market conditions. We also report unbiased and reliable estimate of labour supply elasticity based on BHPS sample

    Growth and income distributions in four EU economies

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    Dynamic multi-sectoral and multi-household general equilibrium models are constructed to show how the economies of Germany, France, Spain and the United Kingdom will evolve from 2006 to 2090. These models generate dynamic paths of investment and capital accumulations, demand and supply across production sectors, consumption and welfare of households, relative prices of goods and services, revenue and expenditure of governments, exports, imports, and trade balance consistent with the dynamic general equilibrium in these economies. The models show that inequalities in income distribution among households will not decrease but widen if the current mix of direct and indirect taxes continues in all four countries. Growing inequalities in these economies justify further investments in education and skills

    Unemployment-inflation trade-offs in OECD countries

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    © 2016 The Author. Inflation and unemployment reduce welfare of individuals and should be as low as possible in any economy. Cointegration and Granger causality tests suggest that there are long run relations between these two variables among the OECD economies. While rates of unemployment vary significantly among these economies, rates of inflation have stabilised at lower rates as a result of inflation targeting policies adopted in them during the last two decades. The Phillips curve phenomena are still empirically significant for 28 out of 35 of these OECD economies in country specific regressions; in fixed and random effect panel data models and in a panel VAR model for 1990:1 to 2014:4. Country specific supply curves and Okun curves are consistent to thin Phillips curve relations. Leftward shifts in the Beveridge and Phillips curves require labour market reforms balancing between job creations and destructions. Complementing macro stimulations by microeconomic structural and institutional reforms can bring efficiency in bargaining for wages and employment among firms and workers to make unemployment-inflation trade-offs more significant and relevant in these economies

    FDI and growth

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    Multinational corporations [MNCs] usually engage in foreign direct investment [FDI] to take cost advantages of producing abroad to negate the need for licensing or subsidiary production. At the macro level, FDI accounts for significant proportions of MNCs total investment and has discernible impacts on economic growth. This is shown theoretically in the growth model where FDI complements domestic capital. Our model predictions tested favourably against panel data analysis of FDI on growth for thirty OECD countries. This paper also contributes in relating micro and macro aspects of the impact of FDI on economic growth and provides empirical support to the existing literature

    Financial deepening and economic growth

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    The core of Shapley-Shubik games and general equilibrium models with a Venn diagram is applied for a theory on the role of real finance in economic growth among advanced economies. Then the dynamic computable general equilibrium (DCGE) models for Germany, France, UK, Japan and USA are constructed to assess the validity of the over financing hypothesis that reappeared after the financial crisis of 2008. Actual financial deepening ratios observed in the non-consolidated balance sheet of the OECD exceeded by factors of 3.5, 2.4, 5.1, 11.6 and 4.8 to the optimal financial deepening ratios implied by DCGE models respectively in these countries because of excessive leveraging and bubbles up to 19 times of GDP which were responsible for this great recession. Containing such massive fluctuations for macroeconomic stability and growth in these economies is not possible in conventional fiscal and monetary policy models and requires a DCGE analysis like this along with adoption of separating equilibria strategy in line of Miller-Stiglitz-Roth mechanisms to avoid asymmetric information problems in process of financial intermediation so that the gap between actual and optimal ratios of financial deepening remain as small as possible

    Welfare and distributional impacts of financial liberalization in an open economy : lessons from a multi-sectoral dynamic CGE model for Nepal

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    By equalizing rates of return across sectors, financial liberalization improves efficiency and equalizes the distribution of income. Efficiency gained in the allocation of resources increases capital usage more in previously heavily repressed sectors such as agriculture and textile, allowing up to a 19 percent expansion in production and employment. The savings and investment responses, degree of factor substitutions, are higher in the complete liberalization than in partial or piecemeal liberalization. Income, consumption, utility and overall welfare of rural and urban households increase. Liberalization is not effective if savings are used in accumulations of unproductive assets i.e. gold, jewelry, urban land, and foreign exchange. Financial liberalization improves the distribution of income by raising the wage rate of rural labour than for urban labour as rural labour-intensive sectors invest more with increased access to financial institutions and demand more labour to complement additional capital employed in these sectors
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