Biography
Cuff obtained a Bachelors of Arts in Economics with Honours atSelected publications
"Optimal unemployment insurance and redistribution" (2018)
Cuff and"Should I stay or should I go? Exit options within mixed systems of public and private health care finance" (2016)
A comparative study of mixed public-private finance in healthcare systems that compares the conditions by which users are able to fully exit from the public system and purchase private insurance, and investigates the reasoning behind such exit decisions. The authors used a controlled laboratory experiment that allowed for either 'universal-exit', where any household regardless of income may exit, or 'conditional-exit', where only individuals who satisfy certain conditions may exit—for purposes of the experiment, the set condition was high-income. The study confirmed predictions that when presented with the opportunity to exit, high-income individuals generally will generally take it. However, contrary to initial predictions, the results showed that high-income earners are less likely to exit under a universal-exit scenario than a conditional-exit despite identical incentives in both scenarios. The paper offers three potential explanations for why high-income individuals were less likely to exit in a universal-exit scenario: altruism, priming bias, and time-constraint. The first explanation is that high-income individuals may stay and support the public system because they are concerned that, upon seeing all the high-income individuals exiting, low-income individuals will follow suit, leading to the collapse of the public system. Second, a priming bias where high-income individuals might recognize the incentive to exit the system, but feel an ''obligation'' to help maintain the public system. This may occur when they feel that "the environment into which they are placed is an environment primed with public provision." Finally, it might be that it simply takes time for individuals to realize their incentive to exit the public system. Were the slow collapse and unraveling of the public system to take place at a faster rate, these individuals would then also exit sooner. The paper concludes that individuals in the "upper three quintiles" would above-all prefer a purely private healthcare system over any type of public system exit, while the rest of the population should strongly prefer a purely publicly financed system without any type of exit option. In an environment where majority-voting is the primary mechanism by which the system is chosen, the latter would win out over any other possible combination."Capital tax competition and returns to scale" (2005)
This paper by Cuff and John Burbridge examines capital tax competition in different regions through a comparison of Nash equilibria using variations of the standard capital tax model. The conclusion finds that inefficiencies in both capital and head taxes can be attributed to regions' incentives to manipulate the terms of trade, rather than any difference in increasing returns."Equalization and the Decentralization of Revenue–Raising in a Federation" (2003)
Cuff and Maurice Marchand study a combination of federalism and economics to determine what specific fiscal policies and intergovernmental transfers are required for federal economies that possess regional governments responsible for public services. According to their study, when labour is homogeneous, a wide variety of regional taxation policies can be utilized for purposes of redistribution so long as there is an optimal equalization scheme in place without concern for the cost of migration . On the other hand, if labour is heterogeneous, the costliness of inter-regional migration does have an effect on optimal policies. When migration is costless, "the set of instruments that can be used to decentralize the unitary state optimuum" is less broad, while when migration is costly, the central government must specifically introduce some incentive to encourage regional governmental redistribution of resources.Professional affiliations
* Affiliate Member, Behavioural Experiments in Health Network, April 2016–present. *Network Member, Oslo Fiscal Studies,Honours
* McMaster University, University Scholar, 2015 –2019. Canada Research Chair in Public Economic Theory, Tier II, 2009 –2014, renewed 2014 –2019. * C.A. Curtis Prizefor Best Doctoral Thesis in Economics, Queen’s University, 2002. * Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Doctoral Fellowship, 1997 –1999. * Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences Graduate Travel Award, 1998. * International Institute of Public Finance Young Scholar’s Award, 1998. * Ontario Graduate Scholarships, 1995 –1997.York University Scholarship, 1994. * Queen’s University Dean’s Special Award, 1993References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cuff, Katherine Living people Canadian women economists 21st-century Canadian educators Canadian editors Canadian economists Canadian women editors Year of birth missing (living people) Queen's University at Kingston alumni