Contents:
Erosa and Gervais , "Optimal taxation in life-cycle economies".
Fahri and Werning , "Insurance and taxation over the life cycle". Guner, Lopez-Danieri and Ventura , "Heterogeneity and government revenues: Higher taxes at the top?
Lessons from a life cycle model with idiosyncratic income risk". Cole, Kim and Krueger , "Analyzing the effects of insuring health risks".
Conesa and Garriga , "Optimal fiscal policy in the design of social security reforms". Conesa and Krueger , "Social security reform with heterogeneous agents".
Conesa and Dominguez , "Intangible capital and Ramsey capital taxation". Trabandt and Uhlig , "The Laffer curve revisited". Basic structure of sovereign default models.
Yifan presents Mendoza-Yue. Yifan presents Bhandari et al. Xiaohan presents Badel-Huggett.
Search this site. The focus is on the degree of progressivity desirable in social security and the design of incentives to delay retirement beyond the earliest age of eligibility for benefits. Before analyzing these models, Diamond presents introductions to optimal income tax theory and the theory of incomplete markets.
He incorporates recent theoretical developments such as time-inconsistent preferences into his analyses and shows that distorting taxes and a measure of progressivity in benefits are desirable. Diamond also discusses social security reform, with a focus on Germany.
Peter Diamond is John and Jennie S. He received the Nobel Prize in Economics.
In this book, Peter Diamond analyzes social security as a particular example of optimal taxation theory. Assuming a world of incomplete markets and asymmetric . Request PDF on ResearchGate | Taxation, Incomplete Markets, and Social Security | In this book, Peter Diamond analyzes social security as a particular.
Taxation, Incomplete Markets, and Social Security. Peter A.