Optimal In-Kind Redistribution
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This paper develops a model of in-kind redistribution where consumers participate in either a private market or a government-designed program, but not both. We characterize when a social planner, seeking to maximize weighted total surplus, can strictly improve upon the laissez-faire outcome. We show that the optimal mechanism consists of three components: a public option, nonlinear subsidies, and laissez-faire consumption. We quantify the resulting distortions and relate them to the correlation between consumer demand and welfare weights. Our findings reveal that while private market access constrains the social planner's ability to redistribute, it also strengthens the rationale for non-market allocations.
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Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
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Luck Out or Outpay? Competing with a Public Option
A monopolist facing a free capacity-constrained public option restricts its own output to induce rationing and extract higher payments, with derived conditions under which public capacity expansion benefits all consum...
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Redistribution Through Market Segmentation
Optimal redistributive segmentations induce the monopolist to charge higher prices to richer consumers and are implementable via price-based regulation.
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