1,450 research outputs found

    Optimal Size and Intensity of Job Search Assistance Programs

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    This paper derives the welfare optimal size and intensity of job search assistance programs in a general equilibrium model where the labor market is affected by search frictions. Both instruments have a priori ambiguous fiscal implications: their direct employment stimulating effects broaden the base of the labor income tax and increase revenues, while also incurring direct costs. At optimal levels, the policy instruments trade off the positive effects on the participants against a marginal increase in taxes, which distorts employment decisions and potentially labor market tightness. We find that the higher unemployment insurance benefits, the lower is the optimal program intensity. Further, the introduction of a job search assistance program is more likely to raise welfare if it is highly effective at improving participants' job search skills, direct program costs are low and if the general level of taxation in the economy and thus the labor market participation tax are high.Job search assistance, optimal size, optimal intensity, unemployment insurance

    Outsourcing, Unemployment and Welfare Policy

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    The paper investigates the consequences of outsourcing of labor intensive activities to low-wage economies. This trend challenges the two basic functions of the welfare state, redistribution and social insurance when private unemployment insurance markets are missing. The main results are: (i) outsourcing raises unemployment and labor income risk ofunskilled workers; (ii) it increases inequality among high- and low-income groups; and (iii) the gains from outsourcing can be made Pareto improving by using a redistributive linear income tax if redistribution is initially not too large. We finally derive the welfare optimal redistribution and unemployment insurance policies.outsourcing, unemployment, social insurance, redistribution

    Profit Taxation and Finance Constraints

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    In the absence of financing frictions, profit taxes reduce investment by their effect on the user cost of capital. With finance constraints due to moral hazard, investment becomes sensitive to cash-flow and own equity of firms. The impact of taxes changes fundamentally. Taxes reduce investment because they erode cash flow and, thereby, a firm's pledgeable income available for repayment to outside investors, and not because they reduce the user cost of capital. We propose a corporate finance model of investment and derive three central results: (i) Even small taxes impose first order welfare losses on financially constrained firms; (ii) ACE and cash-flow tax systems, which are investment neutral in the neoclassical model, are no longer neutral when firms are finance constrained. (iii) When banks are active and provide external finance together with monitoring services, the two systems not only reduce investment, but are also no longer equivalent. With active banks, investment is subject to double moral hazard and the timing of tax payments becomes important. The ACE system gives tax relief at the return stage and provides better incentives than a cashflow tax which gives tax relief upfront.Finance constraints, profit tax, cash-flow tax, ACE tax

    Profit Taxation, Innovation and the Financing of Heterogeneous Firms

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    Credit constraints are more frequent among growth companies with large investment opportunities. For the same reason, profit taxes may harm innovative firms more than standard ones. This paper develops a model of heterogeneous firms where an endogenous share opts for innovation and faces credit constraints in the subsequent expansion phase. We emphasize four results: (i) R&D subsidies not only encourage innovation but also relax finance constraints and help innovative firms to exploit investment opportunities to a larger extent. (ii) Taxes which are neutral in a neoclassical world, still restrict expansion investment of constrained firms by reducing free cash-flow and thereby discourage innovation. (iii) A revenue neutral increase in profit taxes to finance larger R&D subsidies redistributes towards innovative firms and boosts aggregate productivity and welfare. (iv) A revenue neutral tax cut cum base broadening policy similarly boosts innovation and welfareProfit taxes, R&D subsidies, innovation, investment, credit constraints

    Business Taxation, Corporate Finance and Economic Performance

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    This survey of recent research in corporate finance discusses how business taxes, subsidies as well as a country's institutional development affect several important decision margins of heterogeneous firms. We argue that innovative firms, as a result of agency problems between insiders and outside investors, are most frequently finance constrained. We discuss how profit taxes reduce investment of constrained firms by their effect on cash-flow, and of unconstrained firms by their effect on the user cost of capital. Moreover, tax reform as well as tax financed R&D subsidies can enhance aggregate investment, innovation and efficiency by implicitly redistributing profits towards constrained firms where capital earns the highest return. We argue that the corporate legal form improves firms' access to external funds. We then explain the firms' choice between venture capital and bank financing and discuss how business taxation can affect venture capital financing on both the extensive and intensive margins. Finally, we review theory and evidence on how corporate finance may shape a country's comparative advantage in innovative industries as well as aggregate labor market performance when part of firms are finance constrained.Financing constraints, innovation, business taxation, subsidies, entrepreneurial choice

    Profit Taxation and Finance Constraints

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    In the absence of financing frictions, profit taxes reduce investment by their effect on the user cost of capital. With finance constraints due to moral hazard, investment becomes sensitive to cash-flow and own equity of firms. We propose a corporate finance model of investment and derive three central results: (i) Even small taxes impose first order welfare losses on financially constrained firms; (ii) ACE and cashflow tax systems, which are investment neutral in the neoclassical model, are no longer neutral when firms are finance constrained. (iii) When banks are active and provide external finance together with monitoring services, the two systems not only reduce investment, but are also no longer equivalent. With active banks, investment is subject to double moral hazard and the timing of tax payments becomes important. The ACE system gives tax relief at the return stage and provides better incentives than a cash-flow tax which gives tax relief upfront.finance constraints, profit tax, cash-flow tax, ACE tax

    Perlindungan Hukum Terhadap Konsumen Kosmetik Krem Wajah Tanpa Notifikasi BPOM

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    Abstract                   The purpose of this research is to find out and analyze the legal protection for cosmetic consumers of face cream without BPOM notification and to find out and analyze the responsibility of business actors for the circulation of cosmetics that are detrimental to consumers of cosmetic face cream without BPOM notification. The research method is normative juridical research, namely research conducted by examining literature or secondary data as the basis for research by conducting a search of regulations and literature related to the problem under study. Analysis of the data used is by identifying and classifying existing data and compiling it systematically.                  Based on the results of the research conducted, the authors conclude that the legal protection obtained by cosmetic consumers of face cream without BPOM notification is very clearly regulated in Law no. 8 Consumer Protection 1999, Health Law no. 36 of 2009. Responsibilities of Business Actors for the Circulation of Face Cream Cosmetics without BPOM Notification which are Harmful to Consumers In article 19 paragraph 1 of Law Number 8 of 1999 concerning consumer protection "Business actors are responsible for providing compensation for damage, pollution and/or consumer losses as a result of consuming goods and/or services produced or traded. As compensation that is charged to business actors in accordance with the loss, damage, or pollution suffered by consumers after using face cream without BPOM notification.Keywords: Consumer protection, face cream, notificatio

    Erfolgsfaktoren der Mitgliederbindung in Berufsverbänden

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    Wovon hängt ab, ob es einem Berufsverband gelingt, Mitglieder zu binden und damit einen hohen Organisationsgrad zu erreichen? Eine Befragung von insgesamt 850 gegenwärtigen und ehemaligen Mitgliedern aus den 13 Sektionen eines Verbands mit unterschiedlichem Leistungsangebot in seinen Sektionen zeigt, in welchem Masse die individuelle Mitgliedschaftsentscheidung über den Leistungsmix hinaus durch die Strukturen des Verbands und die damit verbundene Einbindung des einzelnen Mitglieds in die Verbandsarbeit beeinflusst werden kann

    GENETIC VARIATION IN SYMPATRIC AND ALLOPATRIC POPULATIONS OF HYBRIDIZING FRESHWATER SNAIL SPECIES(VIVIPARUS ATER AND V. CONTECTUS)

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    To estimate the geographical extent of introgression, we studied the genetic structure of sympatric and allopatric populations of hybridizing freshwater snail species Viviparus ater and V. contectus in central Europe. Six allozyme loci which were variable in Lake Garda, Italy in a previous study (five nearly diagnostic loci between the two species and one highly polymorphic locus in V. contectus) were analyzed from ten sympatric locations and four allopatric populations each for the two species. Presumably introgressed genes (low allele frequencies) were found from at least one locus in seven out of the ten sympatric sites. These seven sites covered most of northern Italy. The data indicate that introgression has occurred from Viviparus contectus to V. ater and vice versa. Therefore, there is a possibility of widespread introgression or mosaic zones in nature. However, we cannot rule out that the observed patterns are due to the shared ancestry. V. ater possessed low genetic variation (the jackknifed mean of Wright's FST±S.E. over four loci was 0.041±0.004). On the other hand, V. contectus showed high genetic differentiation (the jackknifed mean of FST± S.E. over six loci was 0.546±0.166). Although introgression may have caused evolutionary changes in V. ater and V. contectus, it was not strong enough to level out the genetic differences between the two species, which may have originated from isolation among populations in V. contectus and a past bottleneck event in V. ate
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