5 research outputs found
Tax decentralization notwithstanding regional disparities
In assessing tax decentralization optimality, a dilemma between efficiency and redistribution emerges: tax decentralization enhances fiscal discipline, but may also widen interregional disparities by triggering tax competition over mobile tax bases. We present a model that formalizes this trade-off, and find that tax decentralization can be optimal even under Rawlsian social preferences which only weight the welfare of the poorest region in the economy. We also revisit the empirical relationship between tax decentralization and regional disparities. Our estimates uncover a hump-shaped profile, which can be compatible with our normative prescriptions when social aversion for interregional inequality is low.FONDECYTComplex Engineering Systems Institute (CONICYT
Enforcing the Arm's Length Principle in the Knowledge-Based Economy: There Are No Winners, but All Are Losers
From smart cities to experimental cities?
Calzada examines in this chapter the ways in which the hegemonic approach to the “smart city” is evolving into a new intervention category, called the “experimental city.” While this evolution presents some innovations, mainly regarding how smart citizens will be increasingly considered more as decision makers than data providers, likewise, some underlying issues arise, concerning the hidden side and ethical implications of the techno-politics of data and the urban commons. These issues engage with multi-stakeholders, particularly with the specific Penta Helix framework that brings together private sector, public sector, academia, civic society, and entrepreneurs. These innovations in urban life and its governance will inevitably bring us into debate about new potential models of business and society, concerning, for instance, the particular urban co-operative scheme employed
From smart cities to experimental cities?
Calzada examines in this chapter the ways in which the hegemonic approach to the “smart city” is evolving into a new intervention category, called the “experimental city.” While this evolution presents some innovations, mainly regarding how smart citizens will be increasingly considered more as decision makers than data providers, likewise, some underlying issues arise, concerning the hidden side and ethical implications of the techno-politics of data and the urban commons. These issues engage with multi-stakeholders, particularly with the specific Penta Helix framework that brings together private sector, public sector, academia, civic society, and entrepreneurs. These innovations in urban life and its governance will inevitably bring us into debate about new potential models of business and society, concerning, for instance, the particular urban co-operative scheme employed
