Seminars
Seminars
Monday Lunch Seminars Paolo Buonanno (University of Bergamo)
"On the Historical and Geographic Origins of the Sicilian Mafia" Abstract This research attempts to explain the large differences in the early diffusion of the mafia across different areas of Sicily. We advance the hypothesis that, after the demise of Sicilian feudalism, the lack of publicly provided property-right protection from widespread banditry favored the development…
Seminars in Economics Andrew Chesher (University College London)
"Structural Econometrics with Discrete Outcomes" abstract Discrete outcomes are ubiquitous in econometrics. Much information about human behaviour in response to economic stimuli and motivations is provided by data recording variously: choices amongst discrete, ordered or unordered alternatives, attitudes, preferences and strengths of response recorded on ordinal scales, counts of occurrences of events, and so forth.…
Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge Andrea Goldstein, OECD, Paris
"Attractiveness for innovation: The case of Brazil" (at Dipartimento di Economia S. Cognetti de Martiis, Sala Seminari)
Seminars in Economics Valérie Lechene (University College London)
"Efficient responses to targeted cash transfers"
Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge Muge Ozman, Telecom Ecole de Management, Paris
"Networks, innovation and new economic sociology: A unified perspective" (at Dipartimento di Economia S. Cognetti de Martiis, Sala Seminari)
Seminars in Economics Suleyman Basak (London Business School)
"Asset Prices and Institutional Investors"
Monday Lunch Seminars Valeria Miceli (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore)
"Do Sovereign Wealth Funds Herd in Equity Markets?" abstract With $4.4 trillion of assets at end-2010, feared and courted by governments all over the world, characterized by low levels of transparency and often accused of hidden motivations, sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) are today among the most controversial players in global financial markets. SWFs are government…
Monday Lunch Seminars Theodoros Diasakos (Collegio Carlo Alberto)
"Informational Herding in the Provision of Public Goods"
Seminars in Economics Tommaso Nannicini (Università Bocconi)
"How Do Voters Respond to Information? Evidence from a Randomized Campaign"
Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge Anthony Arundel, MERIT, Maastricht
"Understanding innovation in the public sector: Survey results from Europe"
Monday Lunch Seminars Marcello Sartarelli (University of Alicante)
"Do Performance Targets A ffect Financial Support to Schools? Evidence from Discontinuities in Test Scores"
Seminars in Economics Juuso Toikka (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
"Efficiency in Games with Markovian Private Information" (joint with Juan Escobar) abstract We study repeated Bayesian n-player games in which the players' privately known types evolve according to an irreducible Markov chain, type transitions are independent across players, and players have private values. Our main result shows that, with communication, any Pareto-efficient payoff vector above a minmax value can…
Seminars in Economics Chris Taber (University of Wisconsin, Madison)
"Estimation of a Roy/Search/Compensating Di fferentials Model of the LaborMarket"
Monday Lunch Seminars Marina Di Giacomo (Università di Torino)
"Bilateral Trust and the Ownership Structure of Foreign Direct Investments: Evidence from European Firm Level Data" abstract It is often argued that the foreign direct investments (FDIs) have positive effects on host countries. In particular, multinationals tend to have some competitive advantage based on superior technology or other firm-specic knowledge and, therefore, inward FDIs are…
Seminars in Statistics Matthias Birkner (Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany)
Ancestral lineages under local regulation The spatial embeddings of genealogies in models with fluctuating population sizes and local regulation are relatively complicated random walks in a space-time dependent random environment. They seem presently not well understood. We use the supercritical discrete-time contact process on Z^d as the simplest non-trivial example of a locally regulated population…
Seminars in Economics Till Von Wachter (Columbia University)
"The Effects of Extended Unemployment Insurance Over the Business Cycle: Evidence from Regression Discontinuity Estimates over Twenty Years"
Seminars in Economics Manuel Bagues (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid)
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Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge Ari Van-Assche, HEC Montréal
"The role of trade costs in global production networks: Evidence from China's processing trade regime"
Monday Lunch Seminars Roberto Leombruni (University of Torino and LABOR)
"For a Fistful of Euros. Tales of Ordinary unemployment" abstract In most developed countries the insurance against involuntary unemployment is a pivotal policy in the support of workers. In Italy, it has just a marginal role; furthermore, it is currently questioned for the very low coverage it grants to its target population. In this paper we…