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Three essays in macroeconomicsTalbert, Matthew Alan 22 June 2011 (has links)
Chapters one and two of the dissertation investigate the effects of political disagreement on macroeconomic outcomes. I introduce a model of governments with heterogeneous preferences over the composition of consumption between private and public goods alternating in power. Unable to commit to future policies, the party in power has incentive not only to shape consumption according to their preferences but also to manipulate the future state faced by successive governments to influence the decisions of future policy makers. Alternating governments give rise to political business cycles; fluctuations in economy-wide variables due to the political system. Political business cycles help explain the divergence in outcomes of economic variables across countries with different levels of political disagreement and political stability.
The first chapter adapts a real business cycle model to include political shocks in addition to the productivity shocks. This is motivated by a key puzzle in the business cycle literature: for emerging economies the volatility
of consumption is higher than the volatility of output, a feature of the data that is not explained by standard theory. The goal of this chapter is not only to replicate the data but to understand how consumption responds to political shocks differently than shocks to productivity. This model is also able to recreate endogenously the high level of volatility in government expenditure observed in the data. The model can explain up to 29% of the variation in the relative volatility of consumption across countries.
Chapter two focuses on a similar model in the presence of debt instead of capital to develop a positive theory for fiscal policy (debt, expenditure, and deficits) over the business cycle to compare to historical observation. I find that political shocks are important to understand observed U.S. data moments.
Chapter three investigates the welfare effects of tax-deferred retirement accounts (similar to Traditional IRAs in the US). I find that such accounts increase aggregate welfare as well as increasing economy-wide inequality. I find from an aggregate welfare perspective the optimal contribution limit for IRAs is to not have a contribution limit. / text
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Three essays on the impact of political and economic shocks during childhood on health outcomes : evidence from developing countriesHawash, Ronia Ahmed 07 November 2016 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / The dissertation consists of three essays which attempt to capture causal
relationships between shocks during childhood and before birth, and later health
outcomes. Exogenous shocks such as the experiences of war and political upheaval are
treated as natural experiments which minimize problems of endogeneity and selection
that are present in most association studies. The first essay examines how exposure to
civil war during childhood affects females’ outcomes including age at first marriage,
fertility, and second generation infant mortality using the Biafra war which took place in
Nigeria between years 1967 and 1970. The study uses difference-in-difference analysis to
show that females that witnessed war during early adolescence got married younger than
their peers not exposed to the war, and were more likely to have higher fertility and
second-generation infant mortality.
The second essay uses the same shock, the Biafra war, to test if males’ and
females’ exposure to community-level violence results in higher risk of experiencing
domestic violence in their marital relationships in the long-run. The study conducts
difference-in-difference analysis on females and males separately to show that the males’
exposure to the war at ages 13 and older is the main mechanism behind females being
victims of domestic violence in the long-run.
The third essay examines the impact of acute prenatal stress on birth weight using
the 2011 Egyptian revolution fatalities as an indicator for exposure to violence and
stressful events. Results show that higher prenatal stress resulting from political conflict
during the first and second trimesters of pregnancy has a significant negative impact on
birth weight. This finding is robust to restricting the sample to siblings’ data and using
mother fixed effects, suggesting that neither observable nor unobservable characteristics
of mothers are driving the results.
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