Monday Lunch Seminars

Monday Lunch Seminars

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Monday Lunch Seminars Andrea Gallice (Universita’ di Torino e Collegio Carlo Alberto)

"Economic and Class Voting in a Model of Redistribution with Social Concerns" abstract We investigate how concerns about social status may affect individuals' preferences for redistribution. In our model, agents are heterogeneous across two dimensions, productivity and social class, and an individual's social status is defined as his relative standing in terms of a weighted…

Monday Lunch Seminars Leandro Gorno (Getulio Vargas Foundation)

"Revealed preference and identification" abstract I develop a theory of revealed preference based on the assumption that we observe some optimal choices rather than all of them, as is traditionally assumed. I establish sufficient conditions to uniquely recover preferences from behavioral data for three standard cases: ordinal continuous preferences, von Neumann-Morgenstern preferences and qualitative probabilities.…

Monday Lunch Seminars Cornelia Metzig (Imperial College)

"Scaling and Evolutionary Growth in a Macroeconomic Agent-Based Model" abstract I present a simple stock-flow consistent macroeconomic agent-based model for the production cycle, composed of firms, households and a financial sector. Competition of firms in the markets generates a stochastic process for firm evolution, which can be described theoretically. Results are several interrelated distributions for…

Monday Lunch Seminars Giorgio Barba Navaretti (Universita’ di Milano e Centro Luca d’Agliano)

"It takes (more than) a moment: Revisiting the link between firm productivity and aggregate exports" Abstract This paper exploits a unique data set covering a panel of 16 European countries and 21 manufacturing industries to examine within sectors which features of a country's firm productivity distribution are relatedto its aggregate export performance. It provides robust…

Monday Lunch Seminars Ainhoa Aparicio Fenoll (Collegio Carlo Alberto)

"Immigrant Networks and Remittances" abstract This paper studies the influence of immigrants' social networks on remittances, both the probability of remitting and the quantity remitted.  We use the Spanish Migrant Survey, a unique database with detailed information both on immigrant's residence location and remittances. Our methodology accounts for problems of reverse causality, common unobserved factors,…

Monday Lunch Seminars Aleksey Tetenov (Collegio Carlo Alberto)

"Equality-Minded Treatment Choice" ABSTRACT Empirical studies in program evaluation often concern policies that aim to reduce economic inequality in the population. A utilitarian policy maximizing the sum of individual outcomes in the population may not be the best choice if it magnifies economic inequality and post-treatment redistribution of income among the subjects is infeasible. This…

Monday Lunch Seminars Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota)

"Analyzing the Influence of Occupational Licensing Duration on Labor Market Outcomes" ABSTRACT We analyze the labor market influence of the duration of occupational licensing statutes for eleven major universally licensed occupations in the U.S. Time from the start of state occupational licensing (i.e. licensing duration) may matter in influencing labor market outcomes. States usually enact…

Monday Lunch Seminars Toomas Hinnosaar (Collegio Carlo Alberto)

"On the impossibility of protecting risk-takers" Abstract Risk-neutral sellers can extract high profits from risk-loving buyers by selling them lotteries. To limit risk-taking, gambling is heavily regulated in most countries. I show that protecting risk-loving buyers is essentially impossible. Even if buyers are risk-loving only asymptotically, the seller can construct a nonrandom winner-pays auction that ensures unbounded profits. Buyers are asymptotically…

Monday Lunch Seminars Sarah Grace See (Collegio Carlo Alberto)

"Parental Inputs, Formal Care, and Child Outcomes" Abstract Child outcomes are believed to be a result of cumulative inputs from both within and outside the family. Taking the theory of skill formation (Carneiro and Heckman, 2003) and the model of child outcome production function (Todd and Wolpin, 2003), earlier endowments especially those of high quality…

Monday Lunch Seminars Irina Stefanescu (FED Board)

"Cost Saving and the Freezing of Corporate Pension Plans" Abstract The decision to freeze corporate defined benefit (DB) plans is related to variation in prospective cost saving, and freezing DB plans reduces total corporate compensation costs. Firms that freeze have at least 50% higher 10-year expected DB accruals than matched non-freeze firms. Comparing counterfactual DB…

Monday Lunch Seminars Mascia Bedendo (Audencia School of Management)

"Reputational Shocks and the Information Content of Credit Ratings" (Note: the seminar is on Thursday) ABSTRACT In the last two decades Credit Rating Agencies (CRAs) have faced extensive criticism for their rating practices and business models. We examine to what extent a number of significant reputational shocks suffered by CRAs (i.e. the Enron/WorldCom scandals, the subprime…

Monday Lunch Seminars Sander Heinsalu (University of Queensland)

"Spence meets Holmstrom: Luck and repetition in signalling" Abstract This paper studies repeated costly signalling when luck matters for the outcome. Benefit is obtained from the belief of the market, not directly from the effort or the signal. Nonstationary environments are allowed.In the unique equilibrium in which effort is linear in type, the more the…

Monday Lunch Seminars Amedeo Piolatto (University of Barcelona)

"Online booking and information: competition and welfare consequences of review aggregators" Abstract Online review aggregators (e.g., Yelp or ClubKviar) provide detailed information about experience goods, such as restaurants and hotels. This study fosters our understanding of how such aggregators modify competition, profits and welfare. Using a spokes model ofhorizontal competition, I show that review aggregators enhance total welfare mainly by making valuable information…

Monday Lunch Seminars Arthur Van Soest (Tilburg University)

"House Price Expectations" (Note: the seminar is on Thursday) Abstract Utilizing new survey data collected between 2009 and 2014, this paper analyzes American home owners' subjective expectations on future values of their own house. We explore the relationship between house price expectations, local economic conditions, and households' individual characteristics. We examine the heterogeneity in expectations based…