Economic growth and the employer of last resort: A simple model of flexicurity capitalism
This paper presents a model of economic growth with unemployment due to labor market rigidities. The economy consists of a firm that maximizes profits, of a government and of two types of households that maximize inter-temporal utility. One household supplies skilled labor at the first labor market, the other household supplies simple labor at the second labor market. The government in the economy raises taxes and uses its revenues to employ labor receiving unemployment benefits, to finance transfers to the household in the second labor market and to finance public spending. We analyze both the version with exogenous growth as well as an endogenous growth variant, where growth is made endogenous by assuming positive externalities of capital. The exogenous growth model is characterized by global determinacy while it is locally indeterminate. The endogenous growth model can be globally indeterminate with the high balanced growth path being locally indeterminate and the low balanced growth path being locally determinate. We also study how taxation and how the speed of the wage adjustment affect the economy.
Year of publication: |
2009
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Authors: | Greiner, Alfred ; Flaschel, Peter |
Published in: |
Research in Economics. - Elsevier, ISSN 1090-9443. - Vol. 63.2009, 2, p. 102-113
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Subject: | Economic growth Unemployment Flexicurity |
Saved in:
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