The University of Massachusetts Amherst
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UMass Economics

Gómez-Ramírez article on democratic planning

Leopoldo Gómez-Ramírez, Ph.D. candidate in the Economics Department, has published an article titled “On Theories of a Democratic Planned Economy and the Coevolution of ‘Pro-democratic Planning’ Preferences” in International Critical Thought, Volume 4, Issue 2, 2014.

The motivation problem is a common component of discussions about democratic planning.  This paper focuses in particular on individuals’ motivation to work hard and to engage in the scrutiny of public affairs, both necessary traits for the success of a planned economy.  The analysis draws on tools from the evolutionary game theory literature to consider whether the models of Pat Devine (Negotiated Coordination Economy, or NCE) and Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel (Participatory Economics, or Parecon) offer convincing solutions.  I argue the proliferation of those traits would not naturally occur at the outset of democratic planning.  I discuss selection mechanisms that increase the likelihood of successful proliferation of individually costly traits: segmentation, conformism, and group-level interactions.  However, I argue that, under the impact of the defining institutions of NCE/Parecon, segmentation or conformism would not achieve the desired proliferation.  The central conclusion of this paper is, then, that more sanctions and incentives at the group-level should be incorporated to the institutional design of these models.

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UMass Economics

Sturn article on unemployment

Simon Sturn, Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Economics, has published an article titled “Macroeconomic policy in recessions and unemployment hysteresis”  in Applied Economics Letters, Volume 21, Issue 13, 2014.

I adopt Ball’s (1999) cross-sectional approach to test for unemployment hysteresis to panel data. Long-run unemployment is explained with standard institutional controls, and proxies for monetary and fiscal policy reactions in recessions. The sample consists of 20 OECD countries for the period 1985 to 2008. The results indicate that fiscal consolidation in recessions has long-lasting effects on unemployment. No significant impact of monetary policy is found. However, tentative evidence suggests that the effects of fiscal spending are stronger when accommodated by expansionary monetary policy.