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Lucie Gadenne is an Associate Professor of Economics at Queen Mary, University of London, an Associate Director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and a CEPR Research Affiliate. She received her PhD from the Paris School of Economics. Her research interests include public finance and environmental policy in low and middle-income countries.
Recent work by Lucie Gadenne
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How equitable are taxes in low- and middle-income countries?
What roles does taxation play in reducing high levels of inequality in low- and middle-income countries?
Published 22.05.24
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Community networks and trade: Evidence from India
Production networks matter for firm growth. However, little is known about what shapes firms’ production networks in developing countries. This column explores the role of community networks in West Bengal in firm-to-firm trade between 2010 and 2016...
Published 13.10.23
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The effect of electronic transactions on tax compliance: Evidence from West Bengal
A one-off demonetisation led to a shift to electronic payments, which in turn increased tax compliance
Published 25.04.22
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In-kind transfers as insurance: Evidence from India
While academics and policymakers prefer unconditional cash transfer to the poor, they value in-kind transfers that protect against price fluctuations
Published 01.03.21
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Informality, consumption taxes and redistribution
Taxes on consumption help governments in developing countries redistribute thanks to the presence of large informal sectors
Published 07.08.20
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Do taxes affect firm-to-firm trade? Evidence from India
Taxes affect which domestic suppliers firms choose to trade with in India, leading to less within-country trade and firm growth
Published 31.01.20
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What source of money do corrupt officials prefer?
The capacity of Brazilian local governments to source tax revenue has a greater impact on education and corruption than external transfers
Published 07.12.18
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To cut waste and graft, collect taxes
When local governments in Brazil improve tax collection rather than rely on grants to raise revenues, local officials help citizens, not themselves
Published 29.09.17