Hans Holter
Hans Holter
Assistant Researcher
Economics

Hans Holter is a macroeconomist, with a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. His research focuses on the impact of public policy on the labor market and the macro-economy. His work has appeared in professional journals, including the Journal of Monetary Economics, Quantitative Economics and International Economic Review.

2011 - Ph.D. in Economics, University of Pennsylvania

2005 - M.Sc. in Economics, London School of Economics

2004 - B.Sc. in Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Macroeconomics, Labor Economics, Public Finance

  • Halvorsen, Elin, Holter, Hans A., Ozkan, Serdar, Storesletten, Kjetil (2023). Dissecting idiosyncratic earnings risk. (Accepted/In press) Journal Of The European Economic Association.
  • Brinca, Pedro, Ferreira, Miguel H., Franco, Francesco, Holter, Hans A., Malafry, Laurence (2021). Fiscal consolidation programs and income inequality. International Economic Review, 62 (1), 405-460.
  • Holter, Hans A., Krueger, Dirk, Stepanchuk, Serhiy (2019). How do tax progressivity and household heterogeneity affect Laffer curves?. Quantitative Economics, 10 (4), 1317-1356.
  • Chakraborty, Indraneel, Hai, Rong, Holter, Hans A., Stepanchuk, Serhiy (2017). The real effects of financial (dis)integration: a multi-country equilibrium analysis of Europe. Journal of Monetary Economics, 85, 28-45.
  • Brinca, Pedro, Holter, Hans A., Krusell, Per, Malafry, Laurence (2016). Fiscal multipliers in the 21st century. Journal of Monetary Economics, 77, 53-69.
  • Chakraborty, Indraneel, Holter, Hans A., Stepanchuk, Serhiy (2015). Marriage stability, taxation and aggregate labor supply in the U.S. vs. Europe. Journal of Monetary Economics, 72, 1-20.
  • Holter, Hans A. (2015). Accounting for cross-country differences in intergenerational earnings persistence: the impact of taxation and public education expenditure. Quantitative Economics, 6 (2), 385-428.
  • Holter, Hans A., Krueger, Dirk, Stepanchuk, Serhiy (May 2023), 72 p., Until the IRS do us part: (Optimal) Taxation of households.
  • Brinca, Pedro, Ferreira, Miguel H., Franco, Francesco, Holter, Hans A., Malafry, Laurence(2020), Fiscal consolidation programs and income inequality.