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  • Search: subject:"Duty to vote"
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Year of publication
Subject
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compulsory voting 4 Duty to Vote 3 Duty to vote 3 Labour-leisure Choice 3 Tax Evasion 3 Wahlverhalten 3 duty to vote 3 Compulsory voting 2 Eigeninteresse 2 Pivotal voting 2 Theorie 2 Verhaltensökonomik 2 Wahlrecht 2 pivotal voting 2 Criminal tax law 1 Laffer curve 1 Laffer-Kurve 1 Pivital voting 1 Steuerstrafrecht 1 Steuervermeidung 1 Tax avoidance 1 Theory 1 Verantwortung 1 expressive voting 1 pivital voting 1 utilitarianism 1
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Online availability
All
Free 9
Type of publication
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Book / Working Paper 9
Type of publication (narrower categories)
All
Working Paper 5 Arbeitspapier 1 Graue Literatur 1 Non-commercial literature 1
Language
All
English 8 Undetermined 1
Author
All
Usher, Dan 9
Institution
All
Economics Department, Queen's University 4
Published in...
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Queen's Economics Department Working Paper 4 Working Papers / Economics Department, Queen's University 4 Queen's Economics Department working paper 1
Source
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EconStor 4 RePEc 4 ECONIS (ZBW) 1
Showing 1 - 9 of 9
Cover Image
Two Sources of Bias in Estimating the Peak of the Laffer Curve
Usher, Dan - 2013
Important as it is for public policy, there is still no consensus about the size of the revenue-maximizing tax rate at the top of the Laffer curve. The purpose of this essay is not to supply a correct rate, but to identify difficulties in doing so. 1) Estimates of the revenue-maximizing tax rate...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010368295
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Cover Image
Two Sources of Bias in Estimating the Peak of the Laffer Curve
Usher, Dan - Economics Department, Queen's University - 2013
Important as it is for public policy, there is still no consensus about the size of the revenue-maximizing tax rate at the top of the Laffer curve. The purpose of this essay is not to supply a correct rate, but to identify difficulties in doing so. 1) Estimates of the revenue-maximizing tax rate...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010721568
Saved in:
Cover Image
Two sources of bias in estimating the peak of the Laffer curve
Usher, Dan - 2013
Important as it is for public policy, there is still no consensus about the size of the revenue-maximizing tax rate at the top of the Laffer curve. The purpose of this essay is not to supply a correct rate, but to identify difficulties in doing so. 1) Estimates of the revenue-maximizing tax rate...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010213152
Saved in:
Cover Image
Three stories about the chance of casting a pivotal vote
Usher, Dan - 2011
People vote from self-interest or from a sense of duty. Voting from self-interest requires there to be some chance, however small, that one's vote swings the outcome of the election from the political party one opposes to the political party one favours. This paper is a discussion of three...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010290402
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Cover Image
A duty to vote
Usher, Dan - 2011
A duty to vote may be many things. It may be no more than an obligation to cast one's ballot as self-interestedly or as … with a critique of the argument denying any duty to vote because, as with participants in the market, there is no conflict … several interpretations of the duty to vote, and there is a brief review of pros and cons of compulsory voting. …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010290446
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An Alternative Explanation of the Chance of Casting a Pivotal Vote
Usher, Dan - Economics Department, Queen's University - 2011
-interest, along with a duty to vote, in the decision whether to vote or abstain. …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008552199
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What Exactly Is A Duty to Vote ?
Usher, Dan - Economics Department, Queen's University - 2011
A duty to vote may be interpreted narrowly as no more than an obligation to cast one’s ballot, supporting a party or …. Alternatively, a duty to vote may be interpreted broadly as including an obligation to vote for the party or candidate seen as best …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009003126
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Cover Image
Three Stories about the Chance of Casting a Pivotal Vote
Usher, Dan - Economics Department, Queen's University - 2011
People vote from self-interest or from a sense of duty. Voting from self-interest requires there to be some chance, however small, that one's vote swings the outcome of the election from the political party one opposes to the political party one favours. This paper is a discussion of three...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009003127
Saved in:
Cover Image
Duty, self-interest, and the chance of casting a pivotal vote
Usher, Dan - 2010
-wide randomization may be helpful in connecting private benefits from a win for one's preferred party with a duty to vote, and in …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010290314
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