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Sagiri Kitao
Sagiri Kitao
 

Associate Professor
Department of Economics
Hunter College, City University of New York
695 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10065

Phone: 212-772-5400
sagiri.kitao@gmail.com

 
Bio 
Publications

Why Small Businesses Were Hit Harder by the Recent Recession
With Aysegul Sahin, Anna Cororaton, and Sergiu Laiu
Federal Reserve Bank of New York Current Issues in Economics and Finance, Volume 17 (4), 2011

Financing Medicare: A General Equilibrium Analysis
With Orazio Attanasio and Gianluca Violante
Demography and the Economy, Forthcoming, Book Chapter

Labor-Dependent Capital Income Taxation
Journal of Monetary Economics, Forthcoming

Macroeconomic and Redistributional Effects of Consumption Taxes in the United States
Japanese Economic Review, Forthcoming

Short-Run Fiscal Policy: Welfare, Redistribution and Aggregate Effects in the Short and Long-Run
Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Forthcoming

Individual Retirement Accounts, Saving and Labor Supply
Economics Letters, Forthcoming

U.S. tax policy and health insurance demand: Can a regressive policy improve welfare?
With Karsten Jeske
Journal of Monetary Economics, March 2009

Entrepreneurship, taxation and capital investment
Review of Economic Dynamics, January 2008

Labor Supply Elasticity and Social Security Reform
With Selahattin Imrohoroglu
Journal of Public Economics, August 2009

Global demographic trends and social security reform
With Orazio Attanasio, and Gianluca Violante
Journal of Monetary Economics, January 2007

Taxing Capital? Not a Bad Idea after All!
With Dirk Krueger, and Juan Carlos Conesa
American Economic Review, March 2009

Quantifying the Effects of the Demographic Transition in Developing Economies
With Orazio Attanasio, and Gianluca Violante
B.E. Journals in Theoretical Economics - Advances April 2006

Sagiri Kitao's CVPDF

The views expressed in the papers listed on this page are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve System.