Commitment to equity handbook : estimating the impact of fiscal policy on inequality and poverty / edited by Nora Lustig
- Published
- Washington, D.C : Brookings Institution Press, 2023.
- Edition
- Second edition.
- Physical Description
- 1 online resource (1,412 pages)
- Additional Creators
- Lustig, Nora
Access Online
- Contents
- <P><span>VOLUME 1</span></p><p><span>List of Illustrations </span></p><p><span>Foreword </span></p><p><span>François Bourguignon</span></p><p><span>Acknowledgments</span></p><p><span style="font-style:italic;">CEQ Handbook </span></p><p><span>Nora Lustig</span></p><p><span>Abstracts </span></p><p><span>Introduction</span></p><p><span>1 About Volume 1: Fiscal Incidence Analysis: Methodology, Implementation, and Applications</span></p><p><span>2 The Relevance of Fiscal Incidence Analysis in Today's World</span></p><p><span>3 Fiscal Incidence in Practice: The </span><span style="font-style:italic;">Commitment to Equity (CEQ) Assessment</span></p><p><span>4 Main Messages </span></p><p><span>5 Organization of Volume 1 </span></p><p><span>6 Implementing a </span><span style="font-style:italic;">CEQ Assessment</span><span>: How to Use Volume 1</span></p><p><span>7 </span><span style="font-style:italic;">CEQ Assessment: </span><span>Data Requirements </span></p><p><span>8 About Volume 2: Methodological Frontiers in Fiscal Incidence Analysis</span></p><p><span>9 About the CEQ Institute</span></p><p><span>10 About the CEQ Data Center on Fiscal Redistribution</span></p><p></p><p><span>VOLUME 2</span></p><p><span>List of Illustrations</span></p><p><span>Abstracts </span></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;">Alternative Methods to Value Transfers in Kind:</span></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;">Health, Education, and Infrastructure</span></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;"> </span></p><p><span>Chapter 1</span><span>: The Effect of Government Health Expenditure on Income</span></p><p><span>Distribution: A Comparison of Valuation Methods in Ghana</span></p><p><span>by Jeremy Barofsky and Stephen D. Younger</span></p><p><span>Introduction</span></p><p><span>1 What's Wrong with the Cost of Provision? </span></p><p><span>2 Using Healthcare Consumers' Choices to Estimate the Compensating Variation for Public Healthcare Expenditures </span></p><p><span>3 The Health Outcomes Approach </span></p><p><span>4 Summary: Choosing among the Options</span></p><p><span>5 Insurance Value of Financial Risk Reduction </span></p><p><span>6 Conclusion</span></p><p><span>Appendix 1A </span></p><p><span>1 Using the Spectrum Policy Models Software </span></p><p><span>2 Financial Risk Protection with Consumption Floor Proportional to Income </span></p><p><span>3 Concentration Curves by Valuation Method</span></p><p><span>4 Using Willingness and Ability to Pay by Matching Publicly Funded Health Services to Private Health Services</span></p><p><span>5 Data and Do-Files for Replication</span></p><p></p><p><span>Chapter 2</span><span>: The Market Value of Public Education: A Comparison of</span></p><p><span>Three Valuation Methods</span></p><p><span>by Sergei Soares</span></p><p><span>Introduction </span></p><p><span>1 First Method: Schooling Is Worth What It Costs the State to Provide It </span></p><p><span>2 Second Method: Schooling Is Worth What the Labor Market Says It Is Worth </span></p><p><span>3 Third Method: Schooling Is Worth What the Private Education Market Says It Is Worth</span></p><p><span>4 Comparison of Results</span></p><p><span>5 Conclusion </span></p><p></p><p><span>Chapter 3:</span><span> Redistribution through Education: Assessing the Long-Term</span></p><p><span>Impact of Public Spending </span></p><p><span>by Sergio Urzua</span></p><p><span>Introduction </span></p><p><span>1 The Conceptual Framework </span></p><p><span>2 The Value of Public Education Spending to Its Beneficiaries </span></p><p><span>3 Chile and Ghana: Differences and Similarities </span><span>77</span></p><p><span>4 Empirical Analysis</span></p><p><span>5 Conclusions </span><span>105</span></p><p><span>Appendix 3A Dynamic Fiscal Incidence of Public Spending</span></p><p><span>in Education </span><span>111</span></p><p><span>1 The Recursive Problem</span></p><p><span>2 Intertemporal Fiscal Incidence Analysis</span></p><p><span>Appendix 3B Instrumental Variable</span></p><p></p><p><span>Chapter 4</span><span>: The Market Value of Owner-Occupied Housing and Public Infrastructure Services</span></p><p><span>by </span><span>Sergei Soares</span></p><p><span>Introduction </span></p><p><span>1 Literature</span></p><p><span>2 Methodology </span></p><p><span>3 Imputing Rents and Public Infrastructure Services for 2015 </span></p><p><span>4 Comparisons with 2005 and 1995</span></p><p><span>5 Conclusions </span></p><p></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;">Fiscal Incidence of Corporate Taxes</span></p><p></p><p><span>Chapter 5</span><span>: Taxes, Transfers, and Income Distribution in Chile: Incorporating Undistributed Profits </span></p><p><span>by Bernardo Candia and Eduardo Engel</span></p><p><span>Introduction </span></p><p><span>1 Tax Regime and Social Spending in Chile </span></p><p><span>2 Data, Methodology, and Assumptions </span></p><p><span>3 Results </span></p><p><span>4 Marginal Contribution and Shapley Value </span></p><p><span>5 Distributive Effects of the 2014 Tax Reform</span></p><p><span>6 Conclusions </span></p><p></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;">Redistributive Impact of Contributory Pensions</span></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;"> </span></p><p><span>Chapter 6</span><span>: The Within-System Redistribution of Contributory Pension Systems: A Conceptual Framework and Empirical Method of Estimation</span></p><p><span>by Carlos Grushka</span></p><p><span>Introduction </span></p><p><span>1 Are Pension Systems Tax-Transfers or Deferred Wages Schemes? </span></p><p><span>2 Redistribution, Neutrality, and Actuarial Fairness </span></p><p><span>3 Social Security Pensions in Argentina </span></p><p><span>4 How Redistribution Works for Social Security Pensions in Argentina</span></p><p><span>5 An Alternative Methodological Framework </span></p><p><span>6 Conclusion </span></p><p></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;">Fiscal Redistribution and Sustainability</span></p><p><span>Chapter 7</span><span>: Intertemporal Sustainability of Fiscal Redistribution: A Methodological Framework </span></p><p><span>by Jose Maria Fanelli</span></p><p><span>Introduction </span></p><p><span>1 Income Concepts, Fiscal Redistributions, and Sustainability </span></p><p><span>2 Fiscal Redistributions, Demography, and Wealth Constraints </span></p><p><span>3 Fiscal Redistributions and Income Strata</span></p><p><span>4 Concluding Remarks </span></p><p><span>Appendix 7A Pensions as Deferred Income </span></p><p><span>1 Income Strata and Deferred Income </span></p><p><span>2 Private Wealth and Forced Savings </span></p><p><span>3 Demography and Wealth </span></p><p><span>Appendix 7B Nomenclature</span></p><p></p><p><span>Chapter 8</span><span>: Fiscal Redistribution, Sustainability, and Demography in Latin America</span></p><p><span>by </span><span>Ramiro Albrieu and Jose Maria Fanelli</span></p><p><span>Introduction </span></p><p><span>1 Fiscal Policy and Redistribution Outcomes </span></p><p><span>2 Fiscal Redis
- Subject(s)
- ISBN
- 9780815740476 ePub ebook
0815740476 ePub ebook
9780815740469 set - Note
- Previous edition: 2018.
- Endowment Note
- Paterno Libraries Endowment
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