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This article focuses on a growth model in which (unlike other models) low (high) export demand elasticities and the fact that developing countries are importers of capital goods help explaining the slow (high) growth of these countries in the transition and in the steady state. The question...
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BASU [1991], in his introduction, argues that the 1982 debt crisis can be interpreted as a transition from loan pushing to credit rationing induced by an interest shock. He analyzes how in international lending there can be equilibria with credit rationing and with loan pushing. He, and in fact...
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The Porter hypothesis postulates that the costs of compliance with environmental standards may be offset by adoption of innovations they trigger. We model this hypothesis using a game of timing of technology adoption. We will show that times of adoption will be earlier if the non-adoption tax is...
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If human capital formation necessitates public factors and if the latter are financed by a flat-rate income tax, a neoclassical growth model will produce a growth rate of per capita income and real wages that is proportional to the rate of population growth. If a golden rule tax is not...
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