The Dutch F-word
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Series
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Speaker
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FieldOrganizations and Markets
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LocationKitchen/Lounge on floor E1
Rotterdam -
Date and time
September 23, 2021
12:00 - 13:00
Governments use a variety of policies to encourage citizens to make
certain investments. For example, subsidies affect decisions to invest in human
capital, keep livestock, isolate houses, or buy heat pumps. In many cases, the
returns to those investments depend on future policies. Consequently, to make
proper investment decisions, citizens must form expectations about these future
policies. This paper shows theoretically that policies to encourage investments
often depend on their distributional consequences and not on their efficiency
effects. Moreover, we argue that fiscal policies are typically subject to
flexibility problems, not commitment problems. These findings are highly
relevant against the background of governments that, in the wake of climate
change, will use a wide variety of subsidies to encourage citizens and firms to
invest in wind and solar installations, nuclear power plants, or greener cars.