Mouez Fodha

Professeur à PSE et porteur de la Chaire Réussir la transition énergétique

  • Professeur
  • Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
Groupes de recherche
  • Chercheur associé à la Chaire Réussir la transition énergétique.
THÈMES DE RECHERCHE
  • Croissance et développement durable
  • Economie du changement climatique
  • Transition énergétique
Contact

Adresse :48 Boulevard Jourdan,
75014 Paris, France

Publications HAL

  • Pollution, public debt, and growth: the question of sustainability Article dans une revue

    This paper examines an endogenous growth model that allows us to consider the dynamics and sustainability of debt, pollution, and growth. Debt evolves according to the financing adaptation and mitigation efforts and to the damages caused by pollution. Three types of features are important for our analysis: the technology through the negative effect of pollution on TFP; the fiscal policy; the initial level of pollution and debt with respect to capital. Indeed, if the initial level of pollution is too high, the economy is relegated to an endogenous tipping zone where pollution perpetually increases relatively to capital. If the effect of pollution on TFP is too strong, the economy cannot converge to a stable and sustainable long-run balanced growth path. If the income tax rates are high enough, we can converge to a stable balanced growth path with low pollution and high debt relative to capital. This sustainable equilibrium can even be characterized by higher growth and welfare. This last result underlines the role that tax policy can play in reconciling debt and environmental sustainability.

    Auteur : Thomas Seegmuller Revue : Macroeconomic Dynamics

    Publié en

  • Environment, public debt and epidemics Article dans une revue

    We study whether fiscal policies, especially public debt, can help to curb the macroeconomic and health consequences of epidemics. Our approach is based on three main features: we introduce the dynamics of epidemics in an overlapping generations model to take into account that old people are more vulnerable; people are more easily infected when pollution is high; public spending in health care and public debt can be used to tackle the effects of epidemics. We show that fiscal policies can promote convergence to a stable disease-free steady state. When public policies are not able to permanently eradicate the epidemic, public debt, and income transfers could reduce the number of infected people and increase capital and GDP per capita. As a prerequisite, pollution intensity should not be too high. Finally, we define a household subsidy policy that eliminates income and welfare inequalities between healthy and infected individuals.

    Auteur : Marion Davin, Thomas Seegmuller Revue : Journal of Public Economic Theory

    Publié en