M. Paul MAAREK
Enseignant – chercheur

M. Paul MAAREK
Professeur en Sciences économiques

Matière(s) enseignée(s) :
Macroéconomie L1, semestre 1, Monnaie - Finance L2, semestre 1, Problèmes économiques contemporains L1, semestre 1, Finance d'entreprise M1, semestre 2
Thèmes de recherche :
Political Economy, Development Economics, Labor Economics, The Labor share
Coordonnées :
Lemma
4 rue Blaise Desgoffe
75006 Paris
Centre(s) de recherche :
Courriel :
Site web :
Activités / CV
Titres universitaires
- HDR, université de Cergy-Pontoise, 2017
- Doctorat, université Aix-Marseille 2010
Publications récentes
- Democratization and the Conditional Dynamics of Income Distribution. 2018, with Michael Dorsch.
Conditionally accepted at the American Political Science Review - Rent Extraction, Revolutionary Threat and Coups in Non-Democracies. 2018, with Michael Dorsch.
Journal of Comparative Economics (accepted) - Income taxation and the diversity of consumer goods: A political economy approach. 2017, with Renaud Bourles and Michael Dorsch.
Scandinavian Journal of Economics (accepted) - Can the HOS model explain Changes in the Labor Share: A tale of Trade and Wage Rigidities. 2017, with Bruno Decreuse.
Economic Systems - Labor share and Development. 2017, with Elsa Orgiazzi.
World Bank Economic Review (accepted) - Rent Sharing and Workers Bargaining Power: An empirical Cross Country/Cross Industry Panel Analysis. 2017, with Philippe Askenazy and Gilbert Cette.
Scandinavian Journal of Economics - Development and Regulation Under the Threat of Revolution. 2016, with Michael Dorsch and Karl Dunz.
Journal of Comparative Economics - FDI and the labor share in developing countries: A theory and some evidence. 2015, with Bruno Decreuse.
Annals of Economics and Statistics - Macro Shocks and Costly Political Actions in Non-Democracies. 2015, with Michael Dorsch and Karl Dunz.
Public Choice - Inefficient Predation and Political Transitions. 2014, with Michael Dorsch.
European Journal of Political Economy - A note on Economic Inequality and Democratization. 2014, with Michael Dorsch.
Peace Economics, Peace Science and Public Policy - Currency Crises and the Labor Share. 2013, with Elsa Orgiazzi.
Economica