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Dive into the research topics where Lars Kunze is active.

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Featured researches published by Lars Kunze.


Journal of Macroeconomics | 2010

Capital Taxation, Long-Run Growth and Bequests

Lars Kunze

It has been shown that higher capital taxes can have a growth-enhancing effect when combined with a revenue-compensating cut in wage taxes or with an expansion in productivity-increasing public services. The present paper demonstrates that these results critically hinge on the existence of a bequest motive. It is shown that a wage-tax cut is no longer growth-enhancing when bequests are operative. By way of contrast, increasing productive public services may well boost growth. The theoretical findings are illustrated by numerical simulations based on US data.


Empirical Economics | 2018

The effect of unemployment on social participation of spouses: evidence from plant closures in Germany

Lars Kunze; Nicolai Suppa

This paper estimates the effect of an individual’s unemployment on the level of social participation of their spouse. Using German panel data, it is shown that unemployment has a strong negative effect on public social activities of both directly and indirectly affected spouses. Private social activities of either spouse, however, are only found to increase if the indirectly affected spouse is not working. Conflict prevention strategies or habituation may help to rationalise this finding. Our results imply that active labour market policies should account for spillover effects within couples and adopt a family perspective.


Ruhr Economic Papers | 2016

Unemployment as a Social Norm Revisited – Novel Evidence from German Counties

Lars Kunze; Nicolai Suppa

Unemployed individuals may regain identity utility through coping strategies, which however vary with age and gender. Using highly detailed German county level data, we test whether the social norm effect of unemployment is age-dependent. The wellbeing differential between the unemployed and the employed is found to increase with the local unemployment rate at the beginning of the working life but to remain steady or even to decrease in older age. Individual unemployment, however, remains an extremely uncomfortable experience even if local unemployment is high.


German Economic Review | 2017

Like Father, Like Son: Inheriting and Bequeathing

Lars Kunze

Empirical evidence suggests that parents who have themselves inherited from their own parents are more likely to leave an estate to their children even after controlling for income, wealth and education. This implies an indirect reciprocal behavior between three generations by transmitting the attitude towards bequeathing from one generation to the next. We incorporate such an intergenerational chain into an overlapping generations model and show that the economy might be characterized by multiple steady states involving poverty traps. Individuals will not leave bequests unless per capita income levels exceed a threshold level. In such a situation, an unfunded social security security programme may help to overcome poverty by providing additional old age income out of which to bequeath.


German Economic Review | 2012

Capital Income Taxation, Economic Growth and Heterogeneity in the Motivation to Give

Lars Kunze

Abstract This study provides a comprehensive analysis of the relationship between capital income taxation and economic growth within an overlapping generations model when individuals may bequeath wealth. The altruistic concern is modeled as a synthesis of joy-of-giving and family altruism so that individuals may derive utility from the amount of bequest itself and by providing children with a disposable income later on in life. Using this framework, it is shown that, in contrast to the existing literature, increasing the capital income tax rate may well enhance growth under operative bequests.


Finanzarchiv | 2010

Financing Social Security by Taxing Capital Income - A Bad Idea?

Lars Kunze; Christiane Schuppert

This paper examines the growth effects of an increase of capital income taxes with additional revenue being devoted to cut wage-related social security contributions to reduce unemployment. The analysis is carried out in an overlapping generations model with endogenous growth, unemployment and a social security system comprising pensions and unemployment benefits. It is shown that the reform not only promotes employment but may additionally stimulate economic growth. Calibrating the model to match data for the EU15 reveals that European countries can indeed gain in form of higher employment and growth if the initial capital income tax is not too high.


Journal of Macroeconomics | 2014

Life expectancy and economic growth

Lars Kunze


Economics Letters | 2012

Funded social security and economic growth

Lars Kunze


SOEPpapers on Multidisciplinary Panel Data Research | 2014

Bowling Alone or Bowling at All? The Effect of Unemployment on Social Participation

Lars Kunze; Nicolai Suppa


Public Choice | 2015

The political economics of redistribution, inequality and tax avoidance

Carlos Bethencourt; Lars Kunze

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Nicolai Suppa

Technical University of Dortmund

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Wolfram F. Richter

Technical University of Dortmund

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