Jiri Schwarz’s research while affiliated with Charles University in Prague and other places

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Publications (2)


Estimating the Armington elasticity: The importance of study design and publication Bias
  • Article

August 2020

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55 Reads

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113 Citations

Journal of International Economics

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Tomas Havranek

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Jiri Schwarz

A key parameter in international economics is the elasticity of substitution between domestic and foreign goods, also called the Armington elasticity. Yet estimates vary widely. We collect 3524 reported estimates of the elasticity, construct 32 variables that reflect the context in which researchers obtain their estimates, and examine what drives the heterogeneity in the results. To account for model uncertainty, we employ Bayesian and frequentist model averaging. To correct for publication bias, we use newly developed non-linear techniques. Our main results are threefold. First, there is publication bias against small and statistically insignificant elasticities. Second, differences in results are best explained by differences in data: aggregation, frequency, size, and dimension. Third, the elasticity implied by the literature after accounting for both publication bias and study quality lies in the range 2.5–5.1 with a median of 3.8.


Dynamic elasticities of tax revenue: evidence from the Czech Republic

July 2016

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35 Reads

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27 Citations

Tax revenue elasticities with respect to tax bases are key parameters for the modeling of public finances. Yet the existing studies estimating these elasticities for emerging countries disregard the effects of tax reforms on tax revenue, which renders their estimates inconsistent. We introduce a framework for estimating both short- and long-run tax revenue elasticities using quarterly data adjusted for the effects of reforms. Our results suggest that the long-run elasticities in the Czech Republic are 1.4 for wage tax, 0.9 for value added tax, 1.7 for profit tax and 1 for social security contributions. The adjustment process for value added tax and social security contributions is fast, but for the remaining two categories, it is important to distinguish between the short- and long-run elasticities: the initial response of revenue to changes in the bases is weak. In the case of wage tax it takes half a year for the elasticity to surpass unity.

Citations (2)


... For 0 ≠ 0 , Y i and their standard errors are correlated. The correlation might emerge either because researchers ignore negative elasticity estimates (in which case the association is due to apparent heteroskedasticity) or because researchers compensate for large standard errors by using large elasticity estimates (Bajzik et al., 2020). We apply the 'trim-and-fill' method, a widely used non-parametric technique to detect and adjust for publication bias in meta-analysis. ...

Reference:

Exploring heterogeneity in studies of income elasticity of renewable energy deployment: a meta-analysis
Estimating the Armington elasticity: The importance of study design and publication Bias
  • Citing Article
  • August 2020

Journal of International Economics

... Dye [11] with respect to personal income, Poghosyan [12] for Lithuania, Cotton [13] for Trinidad and Tobago for the period of 1990-2009, according to Koester and Prismeier [14], the application of dynamic elasticities could substantially reduce forecast errors in several countries, with the evidence being stronger based on ex-post data than real-time. Havranek et al. [15] suggest that the long-run elasticities in the Czech Republic are 1.4 for wage tax, 0.9 for value added tax, 1.7 for profit tax and 1 for social security contributions. Lagravinese et al [16] investigate the potential long-term growth and short-term cyclical stability of the Italian regional tax system for the period 2001 to 2012. ...

Dynamic elasticities of tax revenue: evidence from the Czech Republic
  • Citing Article
  • July 2016