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Dive into the research topics where Christos Koulovatianos is active.

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Featured researches published by Christos Koulovatianos.


Journal of Business & Economic Statistics | 2009

Nonmarket Household Time and the Cost of Children

Christos Koulovatianos; Carsten Schröder; Ulrich Schmidt

Raising children demands a considerable amount of parental time, obliging working parents either to reduce their leisure time further or to buy childcare services in the market. Parents may face additional opportunity costs upon deciding to participate in the labor market, but these are difficult to measure. Using a survey instrument in Belgium and Germany, we estimate the income compensation needed to maintain family well-being when adults work versus when they do not enter the labor market. In both countries we find that full-time working parents face extra child costs and require higher labor market participation compensation compared with childless adults.


Journal of Economics | 2005

Properties of Equivalence Scales in Different Countries

Christos Koulovatianos; Carsten Schröder; Ulrich Schmidt

Recent studies in high-income industrialized countries have shown that equivalence scales are income-dependent. We investigate whether this dependence also holds in poorer, services oriented countries, by considering the example of Cyprus. We also examine whether household economies of scale and relative children costs differ.


The Review of Economics and Statistics | 2010

Evidence on the Insurance Effect of Redistributive Taxation

Charles Grant; Christos Koulovatianos; Alexander Michaelides; Mario Padula

If households face uninsurable idiosyncratic earnings risk, theory predicts that redistributive tax and transfer systems have both an insurance and a distortionary effect. Exploiting the substantial variation of tax and transfer systems across U.S. states and over time, we investigate the necessary traces of these two effects in the data: that state-level measures of redistributive taxation should correlate negatively with the standard deviation and the mean of the within-state consumption distribution. We find that the first correlation is robust, supporting strongly the presence of an insurance effect. The distortionary effect can also be detected in the data, but it is less precisely estimated.


Vienna Economics Papers | 2007

Family-Type Subsistence Incomes

Christos Koulovatianos; Carsten Schröder; Ulrich Schmidt

Different family types may have a fixed flow of consumption costs, related to subsistence needs. We use a survey method in order to identify and estimate such a fixed component of spending for different families. Our method involves making direct questions about the linkup between aggregate disposable family income and well-being for different family types. Conducting our survey in six countries, Germany, France, Cyprus, China, India and Botswana, we provide evidence that fixed costs of consumption are embedded in welfare evaluations of respondents. More precisely, we find that the formalized relationship between welfare-retaining aggregate family incomes across different family types, suggested by Donaldson and Pendakur (2005) and termed “Generalized Absolute Equivalence Scale Exactness,” is prevalent and robust in our data. We use this relationship to identify subsistence needs of different family types and to calculate income inequality.


Journal of Economic Theory | 2007

The Effects of Market Structure on Industry Growth: Rivalrous Non-excludable Capital

Christos Koulovatianos; Leonard J. Mirman

We analyze imperfect competition in dynamic environments where firms use rivalrous but nonexcludable industry-specific capital that is provided exogenously. Capital depreciation depends on utilization, so firms influence the evolution of the capital equipment through more or less intensive supply in the final-goods market. Strategic incentives stem from, (i) a dynamic externality, arising due to the non-excludability of the capital stock, leading firms to compete for its use (rivalry), and, (ii) a market externality, leading to the classic Cournot-type supply competition. Comparing alternative market structures, we isolate the effect of these externalities on strategies and industry growth.


Dynamic Games and Applications | 2015

Strategic Exploitation of a Common-Property Resource Under Rational Learning About its Reproduction

Christos Koulovatianos

We build a workable game of common-property resource extraction under rational Bayesian learning about the reproduction prospects of a resource. We focus on Markov-perfect strategies under truthful revelation of beliefs. For reasonable initial conditions, exogenously shifting the prior beliefs of one player toward more pessimism about the potential of natural resources to reproduce can create anti-conservation incentives. The single player whose beliefs have been shifted toward more pessimism exhibits higher exploitation rate than before. In response, all other players reduce their exploitation rates in order to conserve the resource. However, the overall conservation incentive is weak, making the aggregate exploitation rate higher than before the pessimistic shift in beliefs of that single player. Due to this weakness in strategic conservation responses, if the number of players is relatively small, then in cases with common priors, jointly shifting all players’ beliefs toward more pessimism exacerbates the commons problem.


Vienna Economics Papers | 2005

Preferences and the Dynamic Representative Consumer

Christos Koulovatianos

This paper provides families of time-separable, twice continuously di?erentiable, and strictly concave utility functions of a group of consumers that are both su?cient and necessary in order to have linear aggregation in a single-commodity-type deterministic dynamic environment, in the presence of consumer wealth-, labor-productivity, and preference heterogeneity, for alternative settings where the rates of time preference can be the same or di?erent across consumers. The employed concept of linear aggregation pertains the existence of a representative consumer with a time-separable utility function. It is proved that when the rates of time preference are choice-independent and heterogeneous across consumers, a representative consumer exists if, and only if, the momentary utility functions of all consumers are exponential. Results are also provided for, (i) common across consumers choice-independent rates of time preference, and, (ii) heterogeneous choice-dependent rates of time preference, and compared with previously identi?ed su?cient conditions for aggregation in the existing literature.


Archive | 2004

Dynamic Duopoly and the Relative Size of Firms

Christos Koulovatianos; Leonard J. Mirman

We explore the role of firm-size asymmetry in a dynamic oligopoly where the consumption of specific capital is required in order to produce output. We find that when larger firms have a cost advantage due to their size, asymmetry leads to a decline in the supply of all firms, less capital consumption and higher industry growth. We explore an alternative setup without cost advantages due to size and we find no link between the distribution of market power on industry growth, suggesting that cost advantages are an important aspect to the role of asymmetries in oligopolistic markets.


Archive | 2003

R&D Investment, Market Structure, and Industry Growth

Christos Koulovatianos; Leonard J. Mirman

We study how alternative market structures influence market supply and R&D investment decisions of firms operating in dynamic imperfectly competitive environments. Firms can reduce their future production cost through R&D investment today, which is the engine of endogenous industry growth. Our framework enables us to identify key strategic ingredients in firms dynamic competitive behavior through analytical characterizations. These ingredients are a static market externality, stemming from the standard oligopolistic Cournot competition, a dynamic externality that arises due to knowledge spillovers, and a dynamic market externality that comes from the interaction of knowledge spillovers with future market oligopolistic competition that firms internalize while making decisions. We isolate the impact of each strategic ingredient by comparing four alternative market structures.


Vienna Economics Papers | 2005

Endogenous Public Policy and Long-Run Growth: Some Simple Analytics

Christos Koulovatianos; Leonard J. Mirman

We study the determinants of voting outcomes on the provision of public consumption through marginal income taxes in the context of the simple linear growth model. We provide analytical results on how the dynamic politicoeconomic equilibrium maps the economic fundamentals to policies and long-run growth. We find that in a deterministic growth environment voters internalize, although imperfectly, the deadweight losses of taxation and vote for lower taxes when the productivity of capital is higher. Therefore, the politicoeconomic channel reinforces the positive role of productivity for growth. In a stochastic linear-growth environment where business cycles are driven by productivity shocks, in line with existing evidence, we find that the level of endogenous public consumption is procyclical but its share of GDP is countercyclical.

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Ulrich Schmidt

Kiel Institute for the World Economy

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Jian Li

University of Luxembourg

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