Public Sector Economics and the Need for Reforms
Theoretically and empirically informed studies on the role and efficiency of the public sector, public wage and employment policy, privatization, tax policy, and fiscal sustainability.

The public sector has grown substantially in the last fifty years. In the euro area, for example, total government expenditures have been around fifty percent of GDP since the early 2000s, resulting in a growing tax burden or high public debt or both. At the same time, government had intervened in all aspects of economic life, from the provision of public goods and services to product and labor market regulation. Research shows that the effect of government size on economic performance is positive in countries where the public sector is efficient but negative in countries where it is inefficient. In this book, experts from academe and central banking discuss reforms that would make the public sector more efficient and/or more equitable.

After a rich review of the public sector reform policy agenda, with particular attention to the role of the public sector and how to improve the provision of public goods and services, the contributors offer theoretically and empirically informed perspectives on some specific policy topics. These include public wage and employment policy, the role of international institutions such as the World Bank in promoting public sector reforms, the optimal mix of tax policy, the measurement of public sector efficiency, and the study of fiscal sustainability. The contributors relate these topics to such deeper issues as individual incentives as well as to policy debates over privatization, and austerity.

Contributors
Konstantinos Angelopoulos, Stylianos Asimakopoulos, Danilo Ballanti, Roberto A. De Santis, Roberto Dispotico, George Economides, Pedro Gomes, Gabriella Legrenzi, James Malley, Costas Milas, Ilaria Petrarca, Apostolis Philippopoulos, Francesco Porcelli, Roberto Ricciuti, Lodewijk Smets, Peter Birch Sørensen, Petros Varthalitis, Francesco Vidoli

"1122860947"
Public Sector Economics and the Need for Reforms
Theoretically and empirically informed studies on the role and efficiency of the public sector, public wage and employment policy, privatization, tax policy, and fiscal sustainability.

The public sector has grown substantially in the last fifty years. In the euro area, for example, total government expenditures have been around fifty percent of GDP since the early 2000s, resulting in a growing tax burden or high public debt or both. At the same time, government had intervened in all aspects of economic life, from the provision of public goods and services to product and labor market regulation. Research shows that the effect of government size on economic performance is positive in countries where the public sector is efficient but negative in countries where it is inefficient. In this book, experts from academe and central banking discuss reforms that would make the public sector more efficient and/or more equitable.

After a rich review of the public sector reform policy agenda, with particular attention to the role of the public sector and how to improve the provision of public goods and services, the contributors offer theoretically and empirically informed perspectives on some specific policy topics. These include public wage and employment policy, the role of international institutions such as the World Bank in promoting public sector reforms, the optimal mix of tax policy, the measurement of public sector efficiency, and the study of fiscal sustainability. The contributors relate these topics to such deeper issues as individual incentives as well as to policy debates over privatization, and austerity.

Contributors
Konstantinos Angelopoulos, Stylianos Asimakopoulos, Danilo Ballanti, Roberto A. De Santis, Roberto Dispotico, George Economides, Pedro Gomes, Gabriella Legrenzi, James Malley, Costas Milas, Ilaria Petrarca, Apostolis Philippopoulos, Francesco Porcelli, Roberto Ricciuti, Lodewijk Smets, Peter Birch Sørensen, Petros Varthalitis, Francesco Vidoli

9.99 In Stock
Public Sector Economics and the Need for Reforms

Public Sector Economics and the Need for Reforms

by Apostolis Philippopoulos (Editor)
Public Sector Economics and the Need for Reforms

Public Sector Economics and the Need for Reforms

by Apostolis Philippopoulos (Editor)

eBook

$9.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Theoretically and empirically informed studies on the role and efficiency of the public sector, public wage and employment policy, privatization, tax policy, and fiscal sustainability.

The public sector has grown substantially in the last fifty years. In the euro area, for example, total government expenditures have been around fifty percent of GDP since the early 2000s, resulting in a growing tax burden or high public debt or both. At the same time, government had intervened in all aspects of economic life, from the provision of public goods and services to product and labor market regulation. Research shows that the effect of government size on economic performance is positive in countries where the public sector is efficient but negative in countries where it is inefficient. In this book, experts from academe and central banking discuss reforms that would make the public sector more efficient and/or more equitable.

After a rich review of the public sector reform policy agenda, with particular attention to the role of the public sector and how to improve the provision of public goods and services, the contributors offer theoretically and empirically informed perspectives on some specific policy topics. These include public wage and employment policy, the role of international institutions such as the World Bank in promoting public sector reforms, the optimal mix of tax policy, the measurement of public sector efficiency, and the study of fiscal sustainability. The contributors relate these topics to such deeper issues as individual incentives as well as to policy debates over privatization, and austerity.

Contributors
Konstantinos Angelopoulos, Stylianos Asimakopoulos, Danilo Ballanti, Roberto A. De Santis, Roberto Dispotico, George Economides, Pedro Gomes, Gabriella Legrenzi, James Malley, Costas Milas, Ilaria Petrarca, Apostolis Philippopoulos, Francesco Porcelli, Roberto Ricciuti, Lodewijk Smets, Peter Birch Sørensen, Petros Varthalitis, Francesco Vidoli


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262332378
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 05/20/2016
Series: CESifo Seminar Series
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 392
File size: 12 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Apostolis Philippopoulos is Professor of Economics at Athens University of Economics and Business.

Apostolis Philippopoulos is Professor of Economics at Athens University of Economics and Business.

Peter Birch Sørensen is Professor of Macroeconomic Theory and Policy at the University of Copenhagen. He is coeditor of the CESifo volume Measuring the Tax Burden on Capital and Labor (MIT Press, 2004).

Apostolis Philippopoulos is Professor of Economics at Athens University of Economics and Business.

Table of Contents

Series Foreword vii

Taking Stock and an Introduction to the Volume Apostolis Philippopoulos 1

I Reforming Public Service Provision: What Have We Learned? Peter Birch Sørensen 15

1 Public Wage and Employment Policy

2 Reforming the Public Sector's Wage Policy Pedro Gomes 113

3 Incentives to Work and Performance in the Public Sector George Economides Apostolis Philippopoulos Petros Varthalitis 157

II The Role of International Institutions

4 World Bank Policy Lending for Public Sector Reform Lodewijk Smets 191

5 External Constraints Matter for Privatization Haria Petrarca Roberto Ricciuti 213

III Issues in Public Policy and Public Finance

6 Optimal Progressive Taxation in a Model with Endogenous Skill Supply Konstantinos Angelopoulos Stylianos Asimakopoulos James Malley 257

7 Measuring Public Sector Performance: A Four Quadrants Model to Monitor Local Governments' Efficiency Francesco Porcelli Francesco Vidoli Roberto Dispotico Danilo Ballanti 293

8 Fiscal Policy Sustainability in the Euro Periphery: A Nonlinear Analysis Roberto A. De Santis Gabriella Legrenzi Costas Milas 337

Contributors 371

Index 373

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews