European Journal of Political Economy
1985 - 2025
Current editor(s): J. De Haan, A. L. Hillman and H. W. Ursprung From Elsevier Bibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 16, issue 4, 2000
- Endogeneity in European money demand pp. 587-609

- Ivo Arnold and Casper de Vries
- Must we choose? European unemployment, American inequality, and the impact of education and labor market institutions pp. 611-638

- Alicia Adsera and Carles Boix
- Long-term appointment of central bankers: costs and benefits pp. 639-654

- Axel Lindner
- What jackpot? The optimal lottery tax pp. 655-671

- Michael Beenstock, Ephraim Goldin and Yoel Haitovsky
- Growth and social security: the role of human capital pp. 673-683

- Alexander Kemnitz and Berthold Wigger
- Political economy of eastern enlargement of the European Union: Budgetary costs and reforms in voting rules pp. 685-705

- Yener Kandogan
- Spatial models of logrolling in the European Union pp. 707-737

- Christophe Crombez
- Modeling political change with a regime-switching model pp. 739-762

- Stephen Blomberg
- Incomplete information as a deterrent to crime pp. 763-773

- Sugata Marjit, Meenakshi Rajeev and Diganta Mukherjee
- The demise of commodity price agreements: the role of exchange rates and special interests pp. 775-805

- Paul Kofman and Jean-Marie Viaene
- Trade integration and the EU economic membership criteria pp. 807-827

- Lars Nilsson
- British trade policy in the 19th century: a review article1 pp. 829-842

- Kevin O'Rourke
- Framing Effects in Taxation, An Empirical Study Using the German Income Tax Schedule: Stefan Traub, Physica-Verlag, Heidelberg, 1999, pp. ix, 207, DM 78.00 pp. 843-845

- Kilian Bizer
- General equilibrium theory: Starr, R.M. (1997). Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 250 pp. ISBN 0-521-56473-5 pp. 846-848

- Ron Wendner
Volume 16, issue 3, 2000
- The median-voter hypothesis, income inequality, and income redistribution: an empirical test with the required data pp. 367-410

- Branko Milanovic
- The European Union as a country portfolio pp. 411-427

- Michael A. Goldberg and Maurice Levi
- Diversity and ingenuity in voluntary collective action pp. 429-443

- Yuval Shilony
- Egalitarian and elitist education systems as the basis for international differences in wage inequality pp. 445-468

- Klaus Wälde
- Health care: private and/or public provision pp. 469-489

- Mireia Jofre-Bonet
- Financial regimes, capital structure, and growth pp. 491-508

- Lutz Arnold and Uwe Walz
- The emergence of political business cycles in a two-sector general equilibrium model pp. 509-534

- Jan Tuinstra
- Social status, inflation, and endogenous growth in a cash-in-advance economy pp. 535-545

- Wen-ya Chang, Yi-ni Hsieh and Ching-chong Lai
- Marginal cost and price over the business cycle: comparative evidence from Japan and the United States pp. 547-569

- Robert Hart and Jim Malley
- Oskar Morgenstern on apparent price rigidity in the 1930s: a comment on Kovenock and Widdows pp. 571-573

- Robert Dimand
- The Struggle Over the Soul of Economics: Institutionalist and Neoclassical Economists in America between the Wars: Yuval P. Yonay, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1998, xiii+290. ISBN 0-691-03419-2. $39.50 pp. 575-581

- Robert Dimand and Robert H. Koehn
- Market integration, regionalism and the global economy: Richard E. Baldwin, Daniel Cohen, Andre Sapir, Anthony J. Venables (Eds.). Centre for Economic Policy Research and Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1999. ISBN: 0-521-641810. Hardback pp. 583-586

- Daniel Piazolo
Volume 16, issue 2, 2000
- Predators, moral decay, and moral revivals pp. 173-187

- Herschel Grossman and Minseong Kim
- Political culture and economic decline pp. 189-213

- Arye Hillman and Heinrich Ursprung
- On the relationship between economic freedom and economic growth pp. 215-241

- Jakob de Haan and Jan-Egbert Sturm
- Private interests and government policy in a global world pp. 243-256

- Ronald Jones
- Policy advice, secrecy, and reputational concerns pp. 257-271

- Otto Swank
- Japanese political culture and government regulation pp. 273-286

- Seiichi Katayama
- Direct democracy, political culture, and the outcome of economic policy: a report on the Swiss experience pp. 287-306

- Lars Feld and Gebhard Kirchgässner
- Citizen restraints on "Leviathan" government: transition politics in Bulgaria pp. 307-338

- Kenneth Koford
- An essay on social capital: looking for the fire behind the smoke pp. 339-366

- Martin Paldam and Gert Svendsen
Volume 16, issue 1, 2000
- Why political culture should be in the lexicon of economics pp. 1-4

- Arye Hillman and Otto Swank
- A model of cultural transmission, voting and political ideology pp. 5-29

- Alberto Bisin and Thierry Verdier
- On the evolutionary stability of preferences for reciprocity pp. 31-50

- Joel M. Guttman
- Wasteful government, tax evasion, and the provision of public goods pp. 51-74

- Gareth Myles
- Harassment, corruption and tax policy pp. 75-94

- Sugata Marjit, Vivekananda Mukherjee and Arijit Mukherjee
- Personal productivity and the likelihood of electoral success of political candidates pp. 95-111

- Gil Epstein
- Corruption and institutions in Russia pp. 113-132

- Mark Levin and Georgy Satarov
- Political culture and economic performance in sub-Saharan Africa pp. 133-158

- Charles Rowley
- Economic policy and political culture in Indonesia pp. 159-171

- James Cassing
Volume 15, issue 4, 1999
- A theory of permissible illegal immigration pp. 585-604

- Arye Hillman and Avi Weiss
- Privatization, ownership structure and transparency: how to measure the true involvement of the state pp. 605-618

- Frantisek Turnovec
- Country size and the voluntary provision of international public goods pp. 619-638

- Robin Boadway and Masayoshi Hayashi
- Environmental improvement with trade liberalization pp. 639-661

- Rolf Bommer and Günther Schulze
- The "greening" of trade unions and the demand for eco-taxes pp. 663-686

- Per Fredriksson and Noel Gaston
- Fiscal illusion and the demand for government expenditures in the UK pp. 687-704

- Norman Gemmell, Oliver Morrissey and Abuzer Pinar
- The election cycle in the inflation bias: evidence from the G-7 countries pp. 705-725

- Manfred Gärtner
- Growth and inequality in an endogenous fiscal policy model with taxes on labor and capital pp. 727-746

- Davide Fiaschi
- Ricardian equivalence with uninformed consumers? pp. 747-758

- Michael Reiter
- Book review pp. 769-771

- Frank G. Steindl
- Book review pp. 773-775

- Hannu Nurmi
Volume 15, issue 3, 1999
- Joint income-tax and VAT-chain evasion pp. 391-415

- Silvia Fedeli and Francesco Forte
- Determining the mix of public and private provision of insurance by majority rule pp. 417-440

- Dan Anderberg
- Elections and the size of the public sector pp. 441-462

- Margarita Katsimi
- Inflation or unemployment? Who cares? pp. 463-484

- Iman Lelyveld
- An empirical assessment of the impact of trade on employment in the United Kingdom pp. 485-500

- Sir David Greenaway, Robert C. Hine and Peter Wright
- The demand for health: results from new measures of health capital pp. 501-521

- Ulf-G. Gerdtham, Magnus Johannesson, L. Lundberg and D. Isacson
- How reliable should auditors be?: optimal monitoring in principal-agent relationships pp. 523-546

- Ingolf Dittmann
- Changing the rules: political competition under plurality and proportionality pp. 547-567

- Ram Mudambi, Pietro Navarra and Giuseppe Sobbrio
- Fiscal policy cycles and the exchange rate regime in developing countries pp. 569-580

- Ludger Schuknecht
- Book Review pp. 581-583

- Unknown
Volume 15, issue 2, 1999
- Equilibrium outcomes of Lindahl-endowment pretension games1 pp. 149-162

- Murat Sertel and Remzi Sanver
- Is there a penalty to being a Catholic in Northern Ireland: an econometric analysis of the relationship between religious belief and occupational success1 pp. 163-192

- Vani Borooah
- The stability inducing propensities of very unstable coalitions: avoiding the downward spiral of majoritarian rent-seeking pp. 193-205

- Roger Congleton and Robert Tollison
- Income distribution, government transfers, and the problem of unequal influence pp. 207-228

- William F. Bassett, John Burkett and Louis Putterman
- Central bank independence and the sacrifice ratio pp. 229-255

- Thomas J. Jordan
- Heavy investment and high pollution as rational choices under socialism pp. 257-280

- Mario Ferrero
- Indirect evolution vs. strategic delegation: a comparison of two approaches to explaining economic institutions pp. 281-295

- Martin Dufwenberg and Werner Guth
- Carrots or sticks? A social custom viewpoint on worker effort pp. 297-310

- Juin-jen Chang and Ching-chong Lai
- Environmental taxes on exhaustible resources pp. 311-329

- Eirik S. Amundsen and Ronnie Schob
- The generalized Coase Theorem and separable individual preferences: an extension pp. 331-335

- Peter Bernholz
- Growth and the public sector: a critique of the critics pp. 337-358

- Stefan Folster and Magnus Henrekson
- Growth and the public sector: A reply pp. 359-366

- Jonas Agell, Thomas Lindh and Henry Ohlsson
Volume 15, issue 1, 1999
- The impact of legislative institutions on public policy: a survey pp. 1-33

- Peter Moser
- Social instability and redistribution of income pp. 35-51

- Josef Falkinger
- Environmental quality with endogenous domestic and trade policies1 pp. 53-71

- Joachim Schleich
- Efficient environmental taxation under moral hazard pp. 73-88

- Jon Strand
- Can we improve upon approval voting? pp. 89-100

- Mustafa R. Yilmaz
- Competition for stars and audiences: an analysis of alternative institutional settings pp. 101-121

- Wolfram Richter and Kerstin Schneider
- On the incompatibility between revenue maximisation and tax progressivity1 pp. 123-140

- Jean Hindriks
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