6th Tinbergen Institute Conference, 2011

Friction and Policy

Organizers: Bas Jacobs (EUR) and Pieter Gautier (VU)

This conference was held December 16-17, 2011 at the Amsterdam Museum

Under what conditions do markets function efficiently?

In the presence of frictions, markets often (but not always) do not generate the socially efficient outcome. However, asymmetric information between the private and public sector prevents the government from designing efficient policies. In both labor and public economics advances have been made to understand and quantify the welfare losses due to search and information frictions. Public policies (e.g. taxes, subsidies) generally cause inefficiencies and can both exacerbate or reduce existing market frictions.

In this conference we brought together a broad set of high quality papers crossing the borders between the fields of labor economics and public finance. The topics of the Conference included sorting/allocation of workers, measurement of frictions and distortions, human capital formation, optimal design of policies including minimum wages, employment protection, UI benefits and income redistribution.

Friday, December 16
09:00-09:15Coffee
09:15-10:00Robin Boadway (Queens)Optimal Income Taxation and the Labour Market: An Overview
10:00-10:45Nicola Pavoni (EUI)Optimal Income Taxation with Asset Accumulation
10:45-11:00Break
11:00-11:45Pieter Gautier (VU)Simultaneous Search and Network Efficiency
11:45-12:30Etienne Lehmann (CREST)Labor Earnings Respond Differently to Income-Tax and to Payroll-Tax Reforms
12:30-13:30Lunch
13:30-14:15Jan Eeckhout (UCL)Assortative Matching in Large Firms
14:15-15:00Coen TeulingsSorting and the output loss due to search frictions
15:00-15:15Break
15:15-16:00Guido Menzio (UPenn)Optimal Insurance of Search Risk
16:00-16:45Arnaud Chéron (Lemans)Life Cycle Equilibrium Unemployment
16:45-17:00Break
17:00-17:45Laurence Jacquet (NHH Bergen)Optimal Redistributive Taxation with both Extensive and Intensive Responses
Saturday, December 17
09:45-10:00Coffee
10:00-10:45Henrik Kleven (LSE)Responses to Notches: Evidence from Pakistani Tax Records
10:45-11:30Pascal Michaillat (LSE)Optimal Unemployment Insurance over the Business Cycle
11:30-11:45Break
11:45-12:30Guy Laroque (UCL)Optimal Taxation and Retirement in a Stationary Economy
12:30-14:00Lunch
14:00-14:45Mike Golosov (Princeton)Optimal Dynamic Taxes
14:45-15:30Björn Brügemann (VU)Welfare Effects of Short-Time Compensation
15:30-15:45Break
15:45-16:30Jim Albrecht and Susan Vroman (Georgetown)Public Sector Employment in an Equilibrium Search and Matching Model
16:30-17:15Emmanuel Fahri (Harvard)Insurance and Taxation over the Life Cycle
17:15-18:00Bas Jacobs (EUR/TI)Optimal minimum wages and optimal redistribution in competitive labor markets with endogenous skill formation