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2022/2023

Public Sector Economics

Code: 102454 ECTS Credits: 6
Degree Type Year Semester
2501572 Business Administration and Management OT 4 2
2501573 Economics OB 2 2

Contact

Name:
Miguel-Angel Lopez Garcia
Email:
miguelangel.lopez@uab.cat

Use of Languages

Principal working language:
catalan (cat)
Some groups entirely in English:
Yes
Some groups entirely in Catalan:
Yes
Some groups entirely in Spanish:
Yes

Teachers

Guadalupe Souto Nieves
Marc Aliana Cervera

Prerequisites

A basic microeconomic theory course, e.g, Microeconomics I, is a prerequisite to register for this Public Sector Economics course.

Objectives and Contextualisation

This course is a standard introduction to Public Sector Economics. Public Finance, or equivalently Public Economics, is the study of the effects of government actions on economic activity. The course thus aims at predicting the effects of such actions in order to provide guidance on the choice between different alternatives. The objective is to provide a toolbox with which to approach in a rigorous way a variety of issues related to the design and evaluation of public policy.

Competences

    Business Administration and Management
  • Capacity for adapting to changing environments.
  • Capacity for oral and written communication in Catalan, Spanish and English, which enables synthesis and oral and written presentation of the work carried out.
  • Demonstrate initiative and work individually when the situation requires it.
  • Demonstrate knowledge of the structure of institutions and the state, their evolution and the consequences of possible changes, to be able to make a positive contribution to the debate about the role they play in current society.
  • Organise the work in terms of good time management, organisation and planning.
  • Select and generate the information necessary for each problem, analyse it and take decisions based on that information.
    Economics
  • Demonstrate initiative and work individually when the situation requires it.
  • Demonstrate understanding of the concepts related to welfare economics and the role of the public sector.
  • Organise the work in terms of good time management, organisation and planning.
  • Select and generate the information necessary for each problem, analyse it and take decisions based on that information.
  • Students must be capable of applying their knowledge to their work or vocation in a professional way and they should have building arguments and problem resolution skills within their area of study.
  • Students must be capable of collecting and interpreting relevant data (usually within their area of study) in order to make statements that reflect social, scientific or ethical relevant issues.
  • Students must be capable of communicating information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialised and non-specialised audiences.
  • Students must develop the necessary learning skills in order to undertake further training with a high degree of autonomy.
  • Students must have and understand knowledge of an area of study built on the basis of general secondary education, and while it relies on some advanced textbooks it also includes some aspects coming from the forefront of its field of study.
  • Understand the motivation for and the sense of public policies.

Learning Outcomes

  1. A capacity of oral and written communication in Catalan, Spanish and English, which allows them to summarise and present the work conducted both orally and in writing.
  2. Analyse economic facts and decisions about efficiency and equity.
  3. Analyse public policies.
  4. Analyse the incidence of taxation.
  5. Analyse the role of international institutions in the economy.
  6. Assess the main social expenditure programmes and their effects on economic growth.
  7. Capacity to adapt to changing environments.
  8. Demonstrate initiative and work independently when required.
  9. Examine the influence and the role of Spanish public institutions in the economy.
  10. Identify the institutions and organisms through which public intervention and regulation of the economy take place.
  11. Interpret the functions of public funds.
  12. Organise work, in terms of good time management and organisation and planning.
  13. Select and generate the information needed for each problem, analyse it and make decisions based on this information.
  14. Students must be capable of applying their knowledge to their work or vocation in a professional way and they should have building arguments and problem resolution skills within their area of study.
  15. Students must be capable of collecting and interpreting relevant data (usually within their area of study) in order to make statements that reflect social, scientific or ethical relevant issues.
  16. Students must be capable of communicating information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialised and non-specialised audiences.
  17. Students must develop the necessary learning skills in order to undertake further training with a high degree of autonomy.
  18. Students must have and understand knowledge of an area of study built on the basis of general secondary education, and while it relies on some advanced textbooks it also includes some aspects coming from the forefront of its field of study.

Content

1. INTRODUCTION
The public sector as an economic agent. The nature of the economic effects of public policy: allocation, distribution and stabilization. Positive versus normative analyses. Criteria for evaluating public policy: economic efficiency, equity, paternalism and individual freedom. Trade-offs among objectives.

2. THE PUBLIC SECTOR IN SPAIN
Agents and activities of the public sector. Indices of public sector dimension. The budget of the public sector in Spain: Presupuestos Generales del Estado. Budget concepts and processes. Indices of budget policy.

3. WELFARE ECONOMICS AND THE ROLE OF PUBLIC SECTOR
The Fundamental Theorems of Welfare Economics. Market failure as a rationale for public intervention: public goods, externalities, increasing returns to scale, incomplete information, non-existence of markets, unemployment and inflation. Normative theories of the State and redistribution.

4. INCOME REDISTRIBUTION
Separating allocation and redistribution issues. Rationales for income redistribution: the utilitarian approach, the maximin criterion, Pareto-optimal redistribution, non-individualistic views, fair processes, social mobility. Conceptual problems with measuring equity. The incidence of public spending. Cash and in-kind transfers. The limits to redistribution: efficiency, equity and incentive-compatibility.

5. EXTERNALITIES
The nature of externalities. Positive and negative externalities. Technological and pecuniary externalities. Mechanisms for internalizing externalities: Pigouvian taxes and subsidies, pollution permits, establishing property rights, regulation. The Coase theorem. Externalities and non-convexities. Marginal and inframarginal externalities. Implications for income distribution.

6. PUBLIC GOODS
Public or collective goods and private goods: non-rivalry and non-excludability. Efficient provision of public goods. The “free-rider” problem. Wicksell’s unanimity rule and Lindahl prices. Efficiency in collective consumption of private goods.

7. NATURAL MONOPOLY AND IMPERFECT COMPETITION
Imperfect competition and monopoly. Efficiency effects and potential welfare gains. Decreasing average costs, public utilities and natural monopoly. Efficiency, equity and profitability as objectives for public sector pricing. Asymmetric information and regulation.

8. COLLECTIVE CHOICE AND PUBLIC SECTOR BEHAVIOUR
The problem of collective choice. Arrow’s (im)possibility theorem. Consequences and alternatives. Majority rule and public goods provision. The median voter theorem. Unidimensional and multidimensional issues. Logrolling. Preference revelation mechanisms for public goods. Direct democracy and representative democracy. The “cast ofcharacters” in the public sector. The role of political representatives. Organization and Incentives in the public sector: from the models of bureaucracy of Niskanen and Migué-Bélanger to the modern theories about the structure and behaviour of agencies. Pressure groups. The theory of government failure.

9. EFFICIENCY IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR
An approach to productive efficiency: technical and allocative efficiency. The analysis of public efficiency. Evaluating efficiency in the public production of goods and services: Cost-Benefit Analysis and Cost-Effectiveness Analysis. Input- and output-oriented measures of technical efficiency. Frontier analysis and Data Envelopment Analysis. The design of institutions for efficiency control in the public sector.

10. COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
Cost-Benefit Analysis as applied Welfare Economics. Criteria for project appraisal. Identifying and quantifying the effects of public projects. Valuing social costs and benefits. Market prices, shadow prices and intangibles. The choice of the social discount rate. The role of distributional considerations. Risk and uncertainty.

11. SOCIAL SECURITY
The social security pension system. The case for the existence of a pension sytem. Two different approaches: intertemporal allocation versus intratemporal redistribution. Consequences for institutional design. The operation of a pay-as-you-go and a fully-funded system. Effects on saving and labour-supply. The “bankruptcy” of social security. The reform of social security.

12. OTHER EXPENDITURE PROGRAMMES
Unemployment insurance. Health programs. Education policy. Objectives and instruments. Public versus private provision. Failures of private markets for insurance. Moral hazard and adverse selection. Unemployment and social exclusion. Minimum income programmes and redistribution. Poverty traps. Family support programmes

Methodology

Teaching will be offered on campus.

The purpose of the distribution and combination of the formative activities between the headings Autonomous, Directed and Supervised is to optimize the result of each one.

The proposed teaching methodology may undergo some modifications according to the restrictions imposed by the health authorities on on-campus courses.

 

Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.

Activities

Title Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Type: Directed      
Lectures 32.5 1.3 2, 4, 6, 3, 1, 10, 11, 12, 13
Practice sessions 17 0.68 2, 4, 6, 3, 10, 11
Type: Supervised      
Tutorials and essays' supervision 12 0.48 2, 4, 6, 3, 1, 10, 8, 11, 12, 13
Type: Autonomous      
Study and information collection 88.5 3.54 2, 4, 6, 3, 1, 10, 8, 11, 13

Assessment

Calendar of evaluation activities

Assessment will be carried out on a continuous basis, and the following items will be used: (i) midterm exam (40%); (ii) final exam (i.e., second part) (40%); suggested activities, participation and class attendance, which will be announced at the beginning of the course (20%). The average grade of the subject will be found as a weighted average, using the above-mentioned weights.

In order to pass the subject, the following two conditions have to be met: (1) the average grade of the subject is equal to or greater than 5, and (2) the average grade computing the two exams is strictly greater than 4.

If a student meets the first requirement but not the second one, he/she will be considered to have an average grade of the subject of 4.5 and will be have to sit the retake exam, as explained in the “Retake process” section below. If a student meets the second requirement but not the first one, or doesn’t meet any of them, he/she will obtain an average grade of the subject that arises from the direct application of the previous weights, and will be able to sit the retake exam (in the terms stated in the “Retake process” section).

Any student who has not attended any of the two exams will be considered as non-assessable.

"The dates of evaluation activities cannot be modified, unless there is an exceptional and duly justified reason why an evaluation activity cannot be carried out. In this case, the degree coordinator will contact both the teaching staff and the affected student, and a new date will be scheduled within the same academic period to make up for the missed evaluation activity." Section 1 of Article 115. Calendar of evaluation activities (Academic Regulations UAB). Students of the Faculty of Economics and Business, who in accordance with the previous paragraph need to change an evaluation activity date must process the request by filling out an Application for exams' reschedule https://eformularis.uab.cat/group/deganat_feie/application-for-exams-reschedule

Grade revision process

After all grading activities have ended, students will be informed of the date and way in which the course grades will be published. Students will be also be informed of the procedure, place, date and time of grade revision following University regulations.

Retake Process

"To be eligible to participate in the retake process, it is required that students have previously been evaluated for at least two thirds of the total evaluation activities of the subject." Section 3 of Article 112 ter. The Retake (UAB Academic Regulations). Additionally, it is required that the student has achieved an average grade of the subject between 3.5 and 4.99.

The date of the retake exam will be posted in the calendar of evaluation activities of the Faculty. Students who pass this exam will get a grade of 5 for the subject. If the student does not pass the retake, the grade will remain unchanged, and hence, he/she will fail the cour

Irregularities in evaluation activities

In spite of other disciplinary measures deemed appropriate, and in accordance with current academic regulations, "in the case that the student makes any irregularity that could lead to a significant variation in the grade of an evaluation activity, it will be graded with a 0, regardless of the disciplinary process that can be instructed. In case of various irregularities occur in the evaluation of the same subject, the final grade of this subject will be 0". Section 10 of Article 116. Results of the evaluation. (UAB Academic Regulations).

Exam rescheduling request

To request a change in the officially scheduled exam, you must submit the following form along with adequate supporting documentation. Remember that the application is subject to approval by the coordinator. Approval depends on the reason for the application, the submission of supporting documents, and the history of the student with respect to previous rescheduling requests. In case of overdue situations the request for reprogramming of tests must be made within 5 calendar days immediately after the date of the test. The bachelors' degree coordinator will have 48 hours to assess the request and respond.

Exam rescheduling is restricted to a serious medical or psychological condition (surgeries, accidents and other serious situations), legal affairs (with official subpoena or court order), official affairs (examinations to become a civil servant) and the decease of a close family member. In all cases, supporting documents will be attached. In the case of a medical justification, if reporting minor problems that may have different intensities, the certificate should specify that the student is not in a position to take an exam.

The official exam calendar is published before the beginning of the course. Therefore, work-related circumstances and those derived from participation in mobility programs will not be considered a valid reason. Personal reasons (driving tests, travelling and other) are not valid reasons either for an exam to be rescheduled.

You will receive an email notifying you of whether your request has been approved. If approved you should contact your professor for rescheduling the exam.

The proposed evaluation activities may undergo some changes according tothe restrictions imposed by the health authorities on on-campus courses.

 

Assessment Activities

Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Written exams (midterm and final), case studies and class attendance 40%, 40%, 20% 0 0 5, 2, 4, 6, 3, 7, 1, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 18, 17, 16, 14, 15, 13

Bibliography

GRUBER, J. (2016), Public Finance and Public Policy, 5th ed., New York: Worth Publishers.

HINDRIKS, J. and MYLES, G.D. (2013), Intermediate Public Economics, 2nd. ed., Cambridge and London: The MIT Press.

ROSEN, H.S. and GAYER, T. (2014), Public Finance, 10th ed., New York: McGraw Hill.

STIGLITZ, J.E. and ROSENGARD, J.K. (2015), Economics of the Public Sector, 4th, New York and London: Norton & Company.

Software

Not applicable.