Joint research unit 7235

Male reproductive health, fairness and optimal policies

Johanna Etner, Natacha Raffin, Thomas Seegmuller

Based on epidemiological evidence, we consider an economy where agents differ through their ability to procreate. Households with impaired fertility may incur health expenditures to increase their chances of parenthood. This health heterogeneity generates welfare inequalities that deserve to be ruled out. We explore three different criteria of social evaluation in the long-run: the utilitarian approach, which considers the wellbeing of all households, the ex-ante egalitarian criterion, which considers the expected well-being of the worst-off social group, and the ex-post egalitarian one, which only considers the realized well-being of the worstoff. In an overlapping generations model, we propose a set of economic instruments to decentralize each solution. To correct for the externality and inequalities, both a preventive (a taxation of capital) and a redistributive policy are required.

AGENDA

Thursday 8 June 2023

Doctorants

Sahil Chopra (Université Sorbonne Paris-Nord)

Economics of litigation : Securities class action with third-party funding

Thursday 8 June 2023

Economics of litigation : Securities class action with third-party funding

Sahil Chopra (Université Sorbonne Paris-Nord)

Economics of litigation : Securities class action with third-party funding

Monday 12 June 2023

Law, Institutions and Economics in Nanterre (LIEN)

Arthur Silve (IAST / Univ. Laval)

TBA

Monday 12 June 2023

TBA

Arthur Silve (IAST / Univ. Laval)

TBA

Thursday 15 June 2023

Lunch

Guillaume Pierné

TBA

Thursday 15 June 2023

TBA

Guillaume Pierné

TBA

Monday 19 June 2023

Law, Institutions and Economics in Nanterre (LIEN)

Juan Mora-Sanguinetti (Banco de Espana)

TBA

Monday 19 June 2023

TBA

Juan Mora-Sanguinetti (Banco de Espana)

TBA

Inscription aux Newsletters

Newsletter subscription