Calendrier

Lu Ma Me Je Ve Sa Di
            01
02 03 04 05 06 07 08
09 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30            

Programme de la semaine


Liste des séminaires

Les séminaires mentionnés ici sont ouverts principalement aux chercheurs et doctorants et sont consacrés à des présentations de recherches récentes. Les enseignements, séminaires et groupes de travail spécialisés offerts dans le cadre des programmes de master sont décrits dans la rubrique formation.

Les séminaires d'économie

Applied Economics Lunch Seminar

Atelier Histoire Economique

Behavior seminar

Behavior Working Group

brown bag Travail et Économie Publique

Casual Friday Development Seminar - Brown Bag Seminar

Development Economics Seminar

Economic History Seminar

Economics and Complexity Lunch Seminar

Economie industrielle

EPCI (Economie politique du changement institutionnel) Seminar

Football et sciences sociales : les footballeurs entre institutions et marchés

GSIELM (Graduate Students International Economics and Labor Market) Lunch Seminar

Histoire des entreprises et de la finance

Industrial Organization

Job Market Seminar

Macro Retreat

Macro Workshop

Macroeconomics Seminar

NGOs, Development and Globalization

Paris Game Theory Seminar

Paris Migration Seminar

Paris Seminar in Demographic Economics

Paris Trade Seminar

PEPES (Paris Empirical Political Economics) Working Group

PhD Conferences

Propagation Mechanisms

PSI-PSE (Petit Séminaire Informel de la Paris School of Economics) Seminar

Regional and urban economics seminar

Régulation et Environnement

RISK Working Group

Roy Seminar (ADRES)

Séminaire d'Economie et Psychologie

The Construction of Economic History Working Group

Theory Working Group

TOM (Théorie, Organisation et Marchés) Lunch Seminar

Travail et économie publique externe

WIP (Work in progress) Working Group

Les séminaires de sociologie, anthropologie, histoire et pluridisciplinaires

Casse-croûte socio

Déviances et contrôle social : Approche interdisciplinaire des déviances et des institutions pénales

Dispositifs éducatifs, socialisation, inégalités

La discipline au travail. Qu’est-ce que le salariat ?

Méthodes quantitatives en sociologie

Modélisation et méthodes statistiques en sciences sociales

Objectiver la souffrance

Sciences sociales et immigration

Archives d'économie

Accumulation, régulation, croissance et crise

Commerce international appliqué

Conférences PSE

Economie du travail et inégalités

Economie industrielle

Economie monétaire internationale

Economie publique et protection sociale

Groupe de modélisation en macroéconomie

Groupe de travail : Economie du travail et inégalités

Groupe de travail : Macroeconomic Tea Break

Groupe de travail : Risques

Health Economics Working Group

Journée de la Fédération Paris-Jourdan

Lunch séminaire Droit et Economie

Marché du travail et inégalités

Risques et protection sociale

Séminaire de Recrutement de Professeur Assistant

Seminaire de recrutement sénior

SemINRAire

Archives de sociologie, anthropologie, histoire et pluridisciplinaires

Conférence du Centre de Théorie et d'Analyse du Droit

Espace social des inégalités contemporaines. La constitution de l'entre-soi

Etudes halbwachsiennes

Familles, patrimoines, mobilités

Frontières de l'anthropologie

L'auto-fabrication des sociétés : population, politiques sociales, santé

La Guerre des Sciences Sociales

Population et histoire politique au XXe siècle

Pratiques et méthodes de la socio-histoire du politique

Pratiques quantitatives de la sociologie

Repenser la solidarité au 21e siècle

Séminaire de l'équipe ETT du CMH

Séminaire ethnographie urbaine

Sociologie économique

Terrains et religion


Calendrier du 19 septembre 2024

brown bag Travail et Économie Publique

Du 19/09/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30

PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 74014 Paris, salle R1-09

HEIM Arthur (PSE)

Rage against the matching: fairness and inequalities in a market design experiment of daycare assignments in France





The choice of childcare alternatives is a central decision which affects several key societal dimensions such as child development, mothers' labour supply, and economic and gender inequalities. While families from lower socioeconomic backgrounds tend to gain the most from formal childcare, these services are overwhelmingly used by more affluent families - a phenomenon often called the Matthew effect. In this paper, we consider access to daycare as a matching problem controlled by local authorities. Based on policymakers' definitions of the procedure, we use market design to define assignment mechanisms and we analyse the consequences of important design choices in a field experiment. The daycare assignment problem is similar to school choice, but includes two additional features: multidimensional constraints that cover weekdays and diversity constraints, typically age groups. Policymakers' design choices affect the definition and range of stable matchings. Our algorithms deliver student optimal fair assignments (SOFA) in the different versions of the problem. From 2020 to 2023, we assigned daycare slots to families in nine urban districts in France. Our objectives were twofold: i) to provide automated assignment mechanisms with desirable properties and ii) to introduce random variation in assignment probabilities for future work on causal effects of accessing daycare. We use two case studies to demonstrate that our assignments meet their intended objectives and compare different assignments. Using a change in priorities in one case study and counterfactual simulations of alternative priority scores, we show that i) giving larger weights to some group (e.g. dual earners) increases their assignment probabilities and share in daycares, ii) increasing priorities with time since registration strongly penalises single parents, in part because iii) dual-earner couples compete for early entry and strategically register as soon as possible, as incentives. iv) Being the largest group and also receiving high social weights, their strategies crowd-out parents who cannot register that early and create inequalities of opportunities even among strategic parents, correlating assignment probabilities with birth month. Other analyses show that diversity constraints may create sharp discontinuities in assignment probabilities that are unrelated to priority scores. Our results provide clear evidence of the mechanisms that contribute to the Matthew effects in childcare, and they are mostly political choices. However, our tools can be used to satisfy other distributional objectives and achieve higher transparency in the assignment processes.

TOM (Théorie, Organisation et Marchés) Lunch Seminar

Du 19/09/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30

R1-14

MOISSON Paul-Henri (PSE)

The Cooperative and the For-Profits



écrit avec Pierre Dubois and Jean Tirole

Behavior seminar

Du 19/09/2024 de 11:00 à 12:00

R2-21

SANJURJO Adam (Universidad de Alicante) *;

La séance est annulée