University of Valencia logo Logo Master's University in Economic Policy and Public Economics Logo del portal

The newspaper Expansión publishes an article by professor Amadeo Fuenmayor

  • November 26th, 2019
Amadeo Fuenmayor

Under the title "Las entregas a cuenta en 2019: una espiral de pasiones", Amadeo Fuenmayor, professor of the Master's Degree in Economic Policy and Public Economics at the Universitat de València, analyses the regional funding system and its weaknesses.

The blog Expansion.com has published Amadeo Fuenmayor's study, in which he tries to explain why so much fuss has been made in 2019 with advance payments. As the professor from the Department of Applied Economics points out, "we should mainly attribute this turmoil to political instability, with a government in office, but we should not forget that there have been certain perversions, self-interested behaviour and a lack of political will to reach agreements".

Professor Amadeo Fuenmayor is a doctor in Economic and Business Sciences and is a Tenured Professor in the Department of Applied Economics at the Universitat de València. He directs the Regional Taxation Chair, he is a member of the Research Group on Public Economic Evaluation (EvalPub) and of the Commission for the Study of Tax Reform in the Valencian Community and a researcher of the Network of Researchers in Autonomic Financing and Financial Decentralisation in Spain (RIFDE). His area of research focuses on Public Economics, with particular emphasis on the following areas: economics of taxation, public regulation, fiscal federalism, poverty and inequality, and public economic evaluation. He has published numerous articles in scientific journals on taxation and the environment, including Hacienda Pública Española, Información Comercial Española, Service Industries Journal, Review of Economics of the Household, Estudios de Economía Aplicada, International Journal of Innovation and regional Development. He has been a researcher on projects and contracts with various entities such as the Institute of Fiscal Studies, Social Security, Valencian Government, IVIE and La Caixa Foundation.

Read the full article published in Expansion.com