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Harring, Niklas; Davies, Peter; Lundholm, Cecilia – Education Sciences, 2017
Climate change challenges governments to reduce emissions, and to gain support for such actions from their citizens. This can be in the form of taxation or legislation, or other forms of government interventions. In previous research, several instruments have been developed to capture attitudes towards the roles of markets and governments in the…
Descriptors: Climate, Government Role, Free Enterprise System, Taxes
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Amegashie, J. Atsu – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
The author makes a pedagogical contribution to optimal income taxation. Using a very simple model adapted from George A. Akerlof (1978), he demonstrates a key result in the approach to public economics and welfare economics pioneered by Nobel laureate James Mirrlees. He shows how incomplete information, in addition to the need to preserve…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Taxes, Income
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Bergman, Margo; Mateer, G. Dirk; Reksulak, Michael; Rork, Jonathan C.; Wilson, Rick K.; Zirkle, David – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
The authors detail an urban economics experiment that is easily run in the classroom. The experiment has a flexible design that allows the instructor to explore how congestion, zoning, public transportation, and taxation levels determine the bid-rent function. Heterogeneous agents in the experiment compete for land use using a simple auction…
Descriptors: Economics, Urban Areas, Economics Education, Experiments
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Hayford, Marc D. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The author combines the supply and demand model of taxes with a Cournot model of bribe takers to develop a simple and useful framework for understanding the effect of corruption on economic activity. There are many examples of corruption in both developed and developing countries. Because corruption decreases the level of economic activity and…
Descriptors: Supply and Demand, Microeconomics, Economic Progress, Taxes
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Liu, Liqun; Rettenmaier, Andrew J. – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
The excess burden of taxation typically has two graphical representations in undergraduate microeconomics and public finance textbooks: the IC/BC (indifference curve/budget constraint) representation and the demand/supply representation. The IC/BC representation has the advantage of showing the behavioral response to a distortionary tax and how a…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Economics Education, Taxes, Undergraduate Study
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Brouhle, Keith; Corrigan, Jay; Croson, Rachel; Farnham, Martin; Garip, Selhan; Habodaszova, Luba; Johnson, Laurie Tipton; Johnson, Martin; Reiley, David – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
This classroom exercise illustrates the Tiebout (1956) hypothesis that residential sorting across multiple jurisdictions leads to a more efficient allocation of local public goods. The exercise places students with heterogeneous preferences over a public good into a single classroom community. A simple voting mechanism determines the level of…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Taxes, Residential Patterns, Economics Education