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Kategorie szczegółowe BISAC

The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy

ISBN-13: 9780199942213 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 351 str.

Casey B. Mulligan
The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy Casey B. Mulligan 9780199942213 Oxford University Press, USA - książkaWidoczna okładka, to zdjęcie poglądowe, a rzeczywista szata graficzna może różnić się od prezentowanej.

The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy

ISBN-13: 9780199942213 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 351 str.

Casey B. Mulligan
cena 272,13
(netto: 259,17 VAT:  5%)

Najniższa cena z 30 dni: 264,62
Termin realizacji zamówienia:
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Dostawa w 2026 r.

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Redistribution, or subsidies and regulations intended to help the poor, unemployed, and financially distressed, have changed in many ways since the onset of the recent financial crisis. The unemployed, for instance, can collect benefits longer and can receive bonuses, health subsidies, and tax deductions, and millions more people have became eligible for food stamps.

Economist Casey B. Mulligan argues that while many of these changes were intended to help people endure economic events and boost the economy, they had the unintended consequence of deepening-if not causing-the recession. By dulling incentives for people to maintain their own living standards, redistribution created employment losses according to age, skill, and family composition. Mulligan explains how elevated tax rates and binding minimum-wage laws reduced labor usage, consumption, and investment, and how they increased labor productivity. He points to entire industries that slashed payrolls while experiencing little or no decline in production or revenue, documenting the disconnect between employment and production that occurred during the recession. The book provides an authoritative, comprehensive economic analysis of the marginal tax rates implicit in public and private sector subsidy programs, and uses quantitative measures of incentives to work and their changes over time since 2007 to illustrate production and employment patterns. It reveals the startling amount of work incentives eroded by the labyrinth of new and existing social safety net program rules, and, using prior results from labor economics and public finance, estimates that the labor market contracted two to three times more than it would have if redistribution policies had remained constant.

In The Redistribution Recession, Casey B. Mulligan offers hard evidence to contradict the notion that work incentives suddenly stop mattering during a recession or when interest rates approach zero, and offers groundbreaking interpretations and precise explanations of the interplay between unemployment and financial markets.

Kategorie:
Nauka, Ekonomia i biznes
Kategorie BISAC:
Business & Economics > Labor - General
Wydawca:
Oxford University Press, USA
Język:
Angielski
ISBN-13:
9780199942213
Rok wydania:
2012
Ilość stron:
351
Waga:
0.74 kg
Wymiary:
23.62 x 15.75 x 2.54
Oprawa:
Twarda
Wolumenów:
01
Dodatkowe informacje:
Bibliografia
Obwoluta

Much of the policy reaction to the Great Recession emphasized Keynesian effects on aggregate demand and downplayed individual incentives to work, produce, and invest. In contrast, Casey Mulligan's research focuses on how an expanded array of U.S. safety-net programs-food stamps, unemployment insurance, Medicaid, and housing/mortgage assistance programs-raised effective marginal income-tax rates especially for poor families. These diminished incentives to work help to explain the weakness of the U.S. economic recovery since the end of the recession in 2009 and also explain why Barack Obama is justifiably called the 'Food-Stamp President.' Hopefully, future government policymakers will deliver better results by learning from this important book.

Professor of Economics, University of Chicago, author of Parental Priorities and Economic Inequality, weekly contributor to Economix blog for the New York Times

Mulligan, Casey B. Casey B. Mulligan is professor of economics at the... więcej >


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