Vogel, Marius
(2022).
Essays in Public Economics.
PhD thesis, Universität zu Köln.
Abstract
Chapter 2, titled “Fair Inheritance Tax”, analyzes fair taxation in an intergenerational framework form a theoretical perspective. The combination of different fairness
axioms, most notably Transfer (consumption inequality reducing transfers between
otherwise ‘identical’ individuals is socially desirable) and Laissez-faire (if everyone
has the same skill level and receives no bequest, taxation is not necessary) imply a
concentration on the worst-off in society. Well-being is measured in a particular way: It
is given by the wage rate someone would need in a world without taxation and received
bequest to be indifferent to the status quo. In terms of taxation the fairness axioms
imply a concentration on the highest average taxes payed by low-wage earners, who
do not receive a bequest. This research extends Fleurbaey and Maniquet (2006) to an
intergenerational context and complements Piketty and Saez (2013); Farhi and Werning
(2010, 2013) from a fairness perspective.
Chapter 3, titled “Regulating Multiple Externalities under Uncertainty”, revisits
the question of optimal regulations from a theoretical point of view. In 2019 over
3000 economists signed a statement in favor of a uniform carbon tax. On the other
hand, economists refer to Weitzman (1974) to defend a carbon tax or a market for
CO2-certificates. The contribution of this chapter to the literature is threefold: First,
to develop a flexible model to study the regulation of (multiple) externalities under
uncertainty. Second, to provide a novel decomposition of Weitzman (1974)’s coefficient
of comparative advantage into a quantity, a variance and a covariance effect. Third,
to show that this decomposition can be analogously applied to the case of multiple
externalities. In particular, under some circumstances, a sector specific regulation is
superior to a universal regulation.
Chapter 4, titled “Fair Compensations for Heterogeneous Labor Inputs”, is joint
work with Raphael Flore and this study provides novel experimental evidence about
normative preferences in situations with heterogeneous labor inputs. For this purpose
we conduct an experiment in which impartial spectators choose the fair distribution of
output in different scenarios. We argue that these preferences can be explained by an
extended version of the ‘equity principle’. We find that spectators reward labor inputs
more when they assess them as more tedious, toilsome, or time demanding. Spectators
with high levels of education or income also value how intellectually demanding or pro-
ductive a task is. Additionally, we show that the spectators’ choices are inconsistent with
consequentialism.
Item Type: |
Thesis
(PhD thesis)
|
Creators: |
Creators | Email | ORCID | ORCID Put Code |
---|
Vogel, Marius | marius.vogel@wiso.uni-koeln.de | UNSPECIFIED | UNSPECIFIED |
|
Contributors: |
Contribution | Name | Email |
---|
Author in quotations or text extracts | Flore, Raphael | r.flore@gmx.de |
|
URN: |
urn:nbn:de:hbz:38-558990 |
Date: |
16 February 2022 |
Language: |
English |
Faculty: |
Faculty of Management, Economy and Social Sciences |
Divisions: |
Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences > Economics > Macroeconomic, Financial and Economic Policy > Professorship for Public Economics |
Subjects: |
Economics |
Uncontrolled Keywords: |
Keywords | Language |
---|
externalities, carbon tax, certificate markets, price and quantity regulation, sector specific regulation | English | Inheritance and Labor Taxation, Social Orderings, Fairness | English | Distribution, Fairness, Heterogeneous Inputs, Equity Principle,
Consequentialism, Impartial Spectators | English |
|
Date of oral exam: |
16 February 2022 |
Referee: |
Name | Academic Title |
---|
Bierbrauer, Felix | Prof. Dr. | Münster, Johannes | Prof. Dr. |
|
Refereed: |
Yes |
URI: |
http://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/id/eprint/55899 |
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