Oxford Review of Economic Policy
1985 - 2024
Current editor(s): Christopher Adam From Oxford University Press and Oxford Review of Economic Policy Limited Bibliographic data for series maintained by Oxford University Press (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 39, issue 4, 2023
- Climate change, complexity, and policy design pp. 667-679

- Pontus Braunerhjelm and Cameron Hepburn
- Five myths about carbon pricing pp. 680-693

- Gilbert Metcalf
- Sensitive intervention points: a strategic approach to climate action pp. 694-710

- Penny Mealy, Pete Barbrook-Johnson, Matthew C Ives, Sugandha Srivastav and Cameron Hepburn
- Policy complementarity and the paradox of carbon pricing pp. 711-730

- Michael Grubb, Alexandra Poncia, Paul Drummond, Karsten Neuhoff and Jean-Charles Hourcade
- Greening the G7 economies pp. 731-751

- Edward Barbier
- Green bonds and carbon emissions pp. 752-764

- Caroline Flammer
- Job creation and deep decarbonization pp. 765-778

- Kelly Sims and Soyoung Oh
- Net zero electricity: the UK 2035 target pp. 779-795

- Dieter Helm
- Double dividend? Transnational initiatives and governance innovation for climate change and biodiversity pp. 796-809

- Harriet Bulkeley, Michele Betsill, Anouk Fransen and Stacy Van
- How will climate change affect ambient air pollution and what can policy-makers do now? Lessons from India pp. 810-827

- Avraham Ebenstein, Sangeeta Bansal, Sagnik Dey, Tanya Gupta, Kshitij Abhay and Avi Simhon
- How may solar geoengineering impact global prospects for climate change mitigation? pp. 828-841

- Katharine Ricke and Anthony Harding
Volume 39, issue 3, 2023
- Taxing the rich (more) pp. 399-405

- İrem Güçeri and Joel Slemrod
- How much tax do the rich really pay? Evidence from the UK pp. 406-437

- Arun Advani, Helen Hughson and Andy Summers
- What is the average federal individual income tax rate on the wealthiest Americans? pp. 438-450

- Danny Yagan
- The messy boundary between pass-through and corporate taxation pp. 451-459

- Wojciech Kopczuk
- The role of trusts in taxing the rich pp. 460-477

- James R Hines
- Taxing cryptocurrencies pp. 478-497

- Katherine Baer, Ruud De Mooij, Shafik Hebous and Michael Keen
- Trickle-down revisited pp. 498-512

- Max Risch
- Does a progressive wealth tax reduce top wealth inequality? Evidence from Switzerland pp. 513-529

- Samira Marti, Isabel Martínez and Florian Scheuer
- Tax progressivity and taxing the rich in developing countries: lessons from Latin America pp. 530-549

- Marcelo Bergolo, Juliana Londoño-Vélez and Dario Tortarolo
- Has FATCA succeeded in reducing tax evasion through foreign accounts? pp. 550-564

- Lisa De Simone and Bridget Stomberg
- The end of bank secrecy: implications for redistribution and optimal taxation pp. 565-574

- Niels Johannesen
- Rethinking capital and wealth taxation pp. 575-591

- Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman
- Are capital gains the Achilles’ heel of taxing the rich? pp. 592-603

- Joel Slemrod and Xinyu Chen
- Taxing the wealthy: the choice between wealth and capital income taxation pp. 604-616

- Spencer Bastani and Daniel Waldenström
- What drives major tax reform? Implications for taxing the rich pp. 617-629

- Martina Beretta, İrem Güçeri and Katrine Jakobsen
- Would an unapportioned US federal wealth tax be constitutional, and what does that mean? pp. 630-642

- Daniel Shaviro
- The wealthy as a barrier to tax reform pp. 643-665

- Benjamin I and Jason Seawright
Volume 39, issue 2, 2023
- Fifty years on: what the Bretton Woods System can teach us about global macroeconomic policy-making pp. 164-182

- Paola Subacchi and David Vines
- Lessons from the 1970s for international monetary reform pp. 183-194

- Barry Eichengreen
- From the Bretton Woods system to the global non-system: the trials and tribulations of slow learning pp. 195-209

- David Vines and Paola Subacchi
- European monetary regimes after the fall of Bretton Woods: a political economy approach pp. 210-218

- Giovanni Farese, Paolo Guerrieri and Pier Carlo
- The Euro on the global stage pp. 219-230

- Klaus Regling
- The role of China in the international financial system pp. 231-244

- Haihong Gao
- Longer-term structural transitions and short-term macroeconomic adjustment: quantitative implications for the global financial system pp. 245-266

- Warwick Mc and David Vines
- Promoting sustainable investment through financial architecture reform pp. 267-282

- Adam Triggs
- Exorbitant privilege and fiscal autonomy pp. 283-299

- Paola Subacchi and Paul van Den
- The International Monetary Fund and capital flows pp. 300-324

- Stephen Grenville
- The IMF’s journey on capital controls: what is the destination? pp. 325-332

- Jonathan Ostry
- Overcoming ‘original sin’ to secure policy space pp. 333-340

- Hyun Song
- The impossibility of the impossible trinity? The case of Indonesia pp. 341-355

- M Chatib and Luqman Sumartono
- Avoiding a lost decade—an interim update pp. 356-359

- Lee C and Mitu Gulati
- Avoiding a lost decade—sovereign debt workouts in the post-Covid era pp. 360-366

- Lee C Buchheit and Mitu Gulati
- Creating a new sovereign debt reconstruction mechanism: why incentives, risk sharing, and CACs will all matter pp. 367-378

- Gordon Menzies and David Vines
- Development finance cooperation amidst great power competition: what role for the World Bank? pp. 379-388

- Scott Morris
- How will digital technologies influence the international monetary system? pp. 389-397

- Eswar Prasad
Volume 39, issue 1, 2023
- New frontiers of trade and trade policy: digitalization and climate change pp. 1-11

- Emily Jones and Christopher Adam
- International pro-competition regulation of digital platforms: healthy experimentation or dangerous fragmentation? pp. 12-33

- Amelia Fletcher
- Market power of digital platforms pp. 34-46

- Jens-Uwe Franck and Martin Peitz
- Regulating Big Tech: the role of enhanced disclosures pp. 47-69

- Mariana Mazzucato, Ilan Strauss, Tim O’Reilly and Josh Ryan-Collins
- Digital disruption: artificial intelligence and international trade policy pp. 70-84

- Emily Jones
- Cross-border data flows and privacy in global trade law: has trade trumped data protection? pp. 85-97

- Mira Burri
- Building trust in digital trade will require a rethink of trade policy-making pp. 98-109

- Susan Ariel
- Trading in the era of carbon standards: how can trade, standard setting, and climate regimes cooperate? pp. 110-122

- Aik Hoe Lim and Kateryna Holzer
- From theory to practice: determining emissions in traded goods under a border carbon adjustment pp. 123-133

- Michael A Mehling and Robert Ritz
- The political economy of carbon border adjustment in the EU pp. 134-146

- Michael Jakob
- Competition, trade, and sustainability in agriculture and food markets in Africa pp. 147-161

- Simon Roberts
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