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Political Economy and Public Economics

Political Economy and Public Economics

The Department of Economics at the University of Warwick has an active Political Economy and Public Economics (PEPE) Research Group. These two disciplines have natural complementarities. Political Economy focuses more on the political feasibility of certain policies by looking at which policies are more likely to enjoy public support and thus succeed in an electoral contest. Public economics looks more at determining which policies are optimal in every environment, but is less concerned about their political approval or feasibility.

Recent world events such as the public backlash against globalization and inequality have raised awareness for the need for more integration between these two approaches as political resistance to the adoption of potentially beneficial policies has become ever more salient. Hence by their very nature these two disciplines transcend traditional field divisions such as micro and macroeconomics: they use theoretical, empirical and experimental methods to obtain conclusions, thus generating synergies with various other groups in our department from development to experimental to history to macroeconomics to economic theory.

Our activities

PEPE Research Group Seminar

Thursday: 11.15am-12.30pm
A weekly seminar is organised that brings top economists and political scientist speakers every week for a double-feature seminar in coordination with the LSE.

For a detailed scheduled of speakers please follow the link below:

https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/seminars/seminars/political-economy 

Organisers: Michela Redoano and Mateusz Stalinski

PEPE Research Group Annual Conference

In collaboration with colleagues from Princeton and Yale, and with the support of CEPR, the PEPE Research Group organises an annual conference which has become a central meeting of political economists in Europe. Having taken place in previous years in Venice and Rome, it attracts over 70 delegates attending from leading institutions in the US, EU and the UK. Every year, several of our PhD students get to participate in a fully funded conference with an opportunity to engage with leading scholars.

Find out more about this year's conference which will take place 26-27 April 2024 in Rome.

Organisers: Helios Herrera, Mateusz Stalinski

People

Academics

Academics associated with the Reseach Group Name research group are:


Michela Redoano

Co-ordinator

Helios Herrera

Deputy Co-ordinator

Events

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CWIP (CAGE Work in Progress) - Amrita Kulka

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Location: S1.50 via MS Teams

Long-Run Agglomeration: Evidence from County Seat Wars

 

Urban areas are shaped by their size, perhaps particularly so over the long run. We study how historical shocks to the size of towns in the American West affected long-run economic outcomes, using elections which determined county seats (capitals) in the 1800s and a regression discontinuity (RD) design. High rates of mobility in the frontier period meant that these elections quintupled population density in winning locations, ultimately determining where 15% of a county resides today. Although the county seat provides relatively few government jobs, we show that the increased town size reshaped their modern local economies in several important ways. First, reported IRS income increases with an elasticity of 0.15 with respect to density. Second, these gains are distributed primarily to the upper end of the income distribution, leading to a 2.9pp increase in the top 5% income share. Finally, spillover effects onto nearby communities are minimal, cutting against notions of positive amenity provision and negative agglomeration shadows.

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