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Place has long been recognized as a key factor in shaping individual lives and livelihoods. It also plays a role in determining the capacity of local groups and organizations to (re)create conditions for social wellbeing. As Chapter 3 detailed, places with established community support systems and affluent or well-resourced residents are more likely to be able to buffer the negative impacts of austerity than places where these resources and networks are limited. However, affluent or well-resourced residents do not always play a positive role in their communities. In some cases, they may gentrify neighbourhoods, displacing low income residents and undermining the social fabric of the community (Casarin et al, 2023). This underlines the need to consider how place and individual characteristics interact to create different experiences of austerity, which can reinforce trajectories of neighbourhood change, as well as existing social and economic (dis)advantages over time (MacLeavy and Manley, 2018; 2022). For instance, someone with a secure, well-paying job and good benefits will be better able to cope with austeritydriven cuts to public services and welfare benefits than someone in low-paid, insecure employment. They will also be more likely to have the means to move to neighbourhoods where local groups and organizations have been able to maintain essential services despite the cuts. Any such moves will leave less well-resourced communities with a higher share of struggling residents, making it even more challenging for them to secure the support and resources needed to recover and thrive.
In what follows, I expand my focus from place to the wider complex of inherited factors that stratify the impact of austerity, creating different experiences even for those living within the same (urban) locale. While the previous chapter examined the retrenchment of the public sphere through the cutting of spending and the reduction of public services, this chapter will focus on other core features of austerity, namely intense welfare reform and labour market deregulation. It will begin by examining how reduced social spending and a growing role for the private sector, coupled with an emphasis on labour market flexibility and the implementation of ‘workfare’ (Peck, 1998b) principles, have led to a more fragmented support system, with increased inequality and reduced access to essential supports.
In the face of austerity measures, a wide array of third sector entities, including charities, voluntary organizations and community groups, have increasingly taken on the role of providing essential public services. Their collective mission is to address the adverse consequences stemming from government spending cuts, offering innovative solutions and tangible support, with the aim of alleviating the grassroots impacts of state retrenchment. This chapter extends the previous discussion of how budget cuts have unevenly affected service provision by exploring in further detail how these responses to austerity not only reflect, but also exert influence on different forms of inequality. It accomplishes this by utilizing qualitative case study research centred on local government austerity within Bristol, a city characterized by divisions (Runnymede Trust, 2016). Specifically, the chapter examines the consequences of austerity cuts and the corresponding responses in areas of the city characterized by different levels of deprivation. Through this analysis, concerns arise regarding the adequacy of the ‘emerging system of crisis-driven assistance’ (MacLeavy, 2023: 5) in addressing socioeconomic disparities. It becomes evident that the geographical distribution of (dis)advantage is a determining factor in who bears the brunt of the dismantling of public spaces and institutions that have historically served as catalysts for personal and community development. The reduction of funding for educational institutions like schools, public resources such as libraries, community and recreation centres, as well as public parks and playgrounds has implications for daily life, life opportunities and life course trajectories, reinforcing various aspects of inequality.
To gain a fuller understanding and appreciation of the unevenness that exists at the local level owing to disparities in government support and variations in the capacity of third sector, voluntary and community organizations relative to service needs, the chapter progresses from this overview of the urban landscape to a more concentrated examination of developments in one specific locale, the inner-city ward of Lawrence Hill. This location has been the focal point of my research for nearly two decades, affording me the opportunity to evaluate the gradual, incremental effects of welfare state retrenchment as manifested in the outcomes of past policy decisions and (in)actions, as well as observed changes since 2010 (see also MacLeavy, 2024). The discussion centres the views of individuals and groups actively engaged in ‘filling the gaps’ of the retreating state through their paid or volunteer roles in service delivery and support in (and around) the area.
Originally, austerity was portrayed as a brief but severe remedy to convince people that constraining state spending and encouraging self-reliance were crucial actions in the aftermath of the 2008 crash and recession. While the cuts and reforms might bring about hardship in the present, they were ‘future-orientated’ in the sense that they would safeguard a good life for future generations (Latimer, 2013: 22). George Osborne, then Chancellor of the Exchequer, presented austerity as a necessary sacrifice to be endured to ‘protect the economy’ (Osborne, 2010a: column 177) and build towards a ‘more prosperous future’ (Osborne, 2010a: column 180) downplaying the fact that austerity is part of the ‘framework conditions’ (Kiersey, 2016: 166) of a long-standing neoliberal agenda that emphasizes market-based solutions and individual responsibility, as well as the highly uneven social and geographical outcomes of such an approach. The incongruity between the newly perceived sacrifices of austerity and its enduring repercussions for social cohesion, economic stability and political landscapes lies at the heart of this chapter. Austerity has, since 2010, become a seemingly self-evident economic principle:
After a decade or more of debt-filled growth, recession is all too easily palmed off as the ‘pain after the party’, recalling to us the true cost of the goods and services we enjoy so much. Neoliberalism, in this sense, is lived as a kind of economic cold turkey. ‘Austerity is painful, yes’, goes the refrain of this morality play, ‘but it is as natural as a hangover’. (Kiersey, 2016: 167)
By contrast, recent scholarly work has deconstructed this narrative exposing its deeper historical roots and unveiling the complex and far-reaching social, economic and political impacts that endure, even after austerity's proclaimed end, and despite recent and significant spending through the COVID-19 pandemic (Adkins et al, 2020; Macartney et al, 2022).
The discussion within this chapter revolves around two key themes. First, the progressive shift towards a lean state and individual self-reliance that has gained traction since the 1980s, placing a greater onus on individuals to manage their welfare needs through personal asset accumulation (Crouch, 2009; see also Adkins et al, 2020). Second, the lasting consequences of this shift for social mobility and life course development, which necessitates a re-examination of collective state-centred arrangements.
This paper evaluates (i) the transmission of global uncertainty shocks to the expectations of professionals and disagreement among them and (ii) the relevance of policy choices in open economies in the context of the impossible trinity. Relying on a large set of survey data covering a wide range of expected macroeconomic outcomes for 33 countries, we establish evidence for an expectation channel of global uncertainty shocks. Global uncertainty exerts significant and adverse effects on expectations over domestic macroeconomic outcomes across the board and also frequently spills over to disagreement over these outcomes, increasing domestic uncertainty. Finally, we identify nonlinear relationships between the policy choices in an open economy and the transmission of uncertainty shocks. Policy choices affect the expected downswing in GDP in the aftermath of uncertainty shocks, the expected response of monetary policy, and the exchange rate and disagreement over future macroeconomic outcomes.
This paper examines how credit guarantees and government subsidies impact investment in a regime-switching model. We provide new explicit pricing formulas for a general standard asset. Almost all common corporate securities’ prices can be easily derived by the explicit formulas though project cash flows are driven by both a Brownian motion and a two-state Markov chain. We provide a method about how governments should specify a proper tax subsidy standard for a given tax rate to motivate a firm to invest in a project in the way they wish. If the tax subsidy is sufficiently high (low), an overinvestment (underinvestment) occurs. The higher the tax rate, the more significant the overinvestment (underinvestment). We pin down the subsidy amount required for motivating a firm to invest immediately and fix the optimal capital structure with government subsidies.
Using a polynomial cointegration technique, this paper shows that the bilateral US current account balance with China has a U-shaped relationship with the life expectancy gap between the US and China. A narrowing gap initially increases the US deficit with China, but eventually, this increased US deficit falls with the further catching-up of Chinese life expectancy. The life expectancy gap between the two countries has been below the threshold level since 2013, and this demographic trend has the potential to improve the US deficit with China. This U-shaped relationship can be theoretically reproduced. A two-country overlapping generations model indicates that the effect of life expectancy is decomposed into four components: retirement savings, social security burden, the number of elderly workers, and the productivity of elderly workers. The total effect of foreign life expectancy on the home current account balance exhibits a sign change in the catching-up of foreign life expectancy.
Relying upon an original (country-sector-year) measure of robotic capital ($RK$), we investigate the degree of complementarity/substitutability between robots and workers at different skill levels. We employ nonparametric methods to estimate elasticity of substitution patterns between $RK$ and skilled/unskilled labor over the period 1995–2009. We show that: i) on average, $RK$ exhibits less substitutability with skilled workers compared to unskilled workers, indicating a phenomenon of “RK-Skill complementarity”. This pattern holds in a global context characterized by significant heterogeneity; ii) the dynamic of “RK-Skill complementarity” has increased since the early 2000s; iii) the observed strengthening is more prominent in OECD countries, as opposed to non-OECD countries, and in the Manufacturing sector, compared to non-Manufacturing industries.
This paper examines the dependence structure and risk spillovers between oil prices and exchange rates in both oil-exporting and oil-importing countries. Using a flexible dependence switching copula model, we analyze both positive and negative dependence and transitions between the dependence regimes. Additionally, we investigate the directional risk spillovers between oil and currency markets in both their downsides and upsides. Based on empirical data from 1999 to 2024 for major oil-exporting and oil-importing countries, we find that oil price-currency dependence is predominantly positive for oil-exporting countries, with infrequent transitions, but mainly negative for oil-importing countries, with frequent transitions between the two dependence regimes. These transitions often occur around crisis or war times. Furthermore, we observe that during downturns in the oil market, tail dependence between oil prices and currencies becomes more pronounced than during upturns. Our results indicate the presence of risk spillovers between oil and currency markets, with the downside spillover effects outweighing the upside ones. Moreover, we find that risk spillover is stronger from oil markets to currency markets than the reverse direction. These insights substantially enrich the existing literature and would offer valuable implications for effective risk management strategies and policymaking.
Nine out of ten constitutions contain explicit emergency provisions. During the pandemic, half of the governments with such constitutions has made use of these provisions by declaring a state of emergency. State of Emergency is the first book to analyse the factors that lead to such provisions being included in newly drafted constitutions. It explores their use – as well as their misuse – and explains the effects that using emergency provisions has. Declaring a state of emergency is particularly challenging in federally constituted states as it endangers the balance of powers between the federal level and the states. This book, therefore, pays special attention to this topic. Focusing on two of the most important recent cases relating to emergency provisions: the Covid-19 pandemic and acts of terrorism, this book uses numerous examples to analyse emergency provisions with a rigorous empirical approach.
We provide empirical evidence that the impact of quantitative easing (QE) programs on investment is weaker for countries with high-credit market regulations. We then extend a simple DSGE model with segmented financial markets to include credit regulation and examine its impact on the transmission of conventional and unconventional monetary policies. In our model, the government requires banks to hold a fraction of their assets in government debt. We show that the presence of such regulation can invert monetary transmission under QE policy: An expansionary QE program raises term premiums on corporate bonds and causes a contraction instead of an expansion in the economy. Such a perversion is absent under conventional policy. Further, in contrast to Carlstrom et al. (2017), we show that a simple Taylor rule welfare dominates a term premium peg under financial shocks, while the peg does better in the case of non-financial shocks.
Rising income and wealth inequality across the developed world has prompted a renewed focus on the mechanisms driving inequality. This paper contributes to the existing literature by studying the impact from life-cycle savings, intergenerational transfers, and fertility differences between the rich and the poor on the wealth distribution. We find that bequests increase the level of wealth inequality and that fertility differences between the rich and the poor amplify this relationship. The counterfactual exercises show that the interaction between bequests and differential fertility is quantitatively important for understanding wealth inequality in the United States.
This article analyses the endogenous choice of farmers to be organic or conventional in a groundwater evolutionary model when a tax on fertiliser on conventional farmers is implemented by a regulatory agency. The analysis of the model shows that the coexistence of both type of farmers only occurs when the decrease in productivity due to organic production is relatively low and the price premium for organic products is relatively high. However, even if conversion is welfare improving, our results show that this conversion may be done at the expense of the water resource with a lower water table. An application to the Western la Mancha aquifer (Spain) illustrates the main results.
Data show that an increase in the Gini coefficient is associated with a falling bottom $p_{B}$% income share and an increasing top $p_{T}$ % income share where, for example $p_{B}$ = 40 and $p_{T}$ = 1. This relationship, which we call the $X$ inequality relationship, is pervasive in the sense that it is observed in many countries, including the US, the UK, France and others. The purpose of this paper is (i) to construct a Schumpeterian growth model to explain the relationship, and (ii) to identify/quantify factors behind it via calibration of the US economy. Our model gives rise to a double-Pareto distribution of income as a result of entrant and incumbent innovations. Its advantage is that it allows us to develop iso-Gini loci and iso-income share schedules in a tractable way. Using a double-Pareto distribution as an approximation of an underlying income distribution, calibration analysis reveals that a declining business dynamism and fiscal policy changes in the past decades played a significant role in generating the $X$ inequality relationship in the US.
This paper examines the effects of heterogeneous biased expectations between the young and old on business cycles and explores its policy implications. Empirical findings reveal that individuals, particularly the young, can have more optimistic or pessimistic views about the future state of the economy compared to the data-generating measure. This study relates these results to the learning-from-experience literature, which suggests that individuals, particularly the young, place greater weight on recent observations when forming their expectations. Incorporating household weighting schemes into a life-cycle learning model, I show that household sensitivity to recent observations amplifies the effects of economic shocks. However, the amplification effects become less extensive as the population ages due to the lower sensitivity of the old. My simulation results indicate that a 10 percentage point increase in the old population ratio leads to a 16 percent decrease in output volatility. Regarding policy implications, this paper suggests that the government spending multiplier declines by approximately 10 percent when the old population ratio rises by 10 percentage points due to weak amplification effects. Moreover, the weakened output effects deteriorate the welfare of the population, particularly that of the young.
U.S. states are sovereign entities and can’t declare bankruptcy as cities and municipalities. This paper examines the impact of a switch in sovereign bankruptcy rules that allows declaring bankruptcy from an economics model perspective. Allowing bankruptcy increases ex-ante risks for the government to refuse repayment, but provides ex-post benefits of reducing default costs and saving federal bailouts. This paper provides a simple framework to analyze this tradeoff. Event analysis shows that an unexpected switch in bankruptcy rules that allows for bankruptcy would decrease government debt-to-GDP ratio by 9.2 percentage points, increase consumption by 0.69 percent, but increase spread by 1.1 percentage points.
This paper empirically examines the dynamic relationship between stock market volatility and commodity prices through the time-varying risk aversion channel using daily data between December 31 in 1999 and June 14 in 2021. We employ a time-varying structural-form vector autoregressive model (VAR) model with (aggregate, sectoral and sixteen individual) commodity prices. The results suggest that the transmission mechanism of stock market volatility shocks on the commodity prices change over time. The negative effect of stock market volatility on commodity prices is more statistically significant in the 2008–09 Global Financial Crisis than that during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Further, the effect is greater in energy commodities compared to the agricultural and metals markets. The long-lasting negative effect of risk aversion is stronger compared to that of the expected stock market volatility on the commodity price. The change in the stock-commodity transmission mechanism is likely due to changes in underlying sources of risk aversion and expected uncertainty over time.
We extend the growth-at-risk (GaR) literature by examining US growth risks over 130 years using a time-varying parameter stochastic volatility regression model. This model effectively captures the distribution of GDP growth over long samples, accommodating changing relationships across variables and structural breaks. Our analysis offers several key insights for policymakers. We identify significant temporal variation in both the level and determinants of GaR. The stability of upside risks to GDP growth, as seen in previous research, is largely confined to the Great Moderation period, with a more balanced risk distribution prior to the 1970s. Additionally, the distribution of GDP growth has narrowed significantly since the end of the Bretton Woods system. Financial stress is consistently associated with higher downside risks, without affecting upside risks. Moreover, indicators such as credit growth and house prices influence both downside and upside risks during economic booms. Our findings also contribute to the financial cycle literature by providing a comprehensive view of the drivers and risks associated with economic booms and recessions over time.
We quantify the importance of endogenous human capital and of selection effects for counterfactual analysis of social security (SS) reforms. The literature typically performs these analyses by using structural models featuring exogenous productivity profiles. However, this approach faces two issues: (i) the estimation of productivity is subject to selection bias, and (ii) productivity is endogenous to the SS reforms. In this paper, we estimate a quantitative overlapping generations model featuring endogenous human capital accumulation using US data. First, we eliminate the SS and find a large positive effect on aggregate effective labor supply (${+}10.31\%$). Next, we build variants of this model to quantify the two issues (i) and (ii). We find that the endogeneity issue (ii) is quantitatively more important than the selection bias issue (i).