Calendrier du mois de décembre 2024
Travail et économie publique externe
Du 19/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 74014 Paris, salle R1-09
KOSTER Hans (VU)
The inefficiency of tied subsidies: Evidence from the privatisation of UK public housing
écrit avec Ted Pinchbeck
Tied subsidies distort consumption choices and may be inefficient relative to untied subsidies. We estimate the consumption inefficiency of tied rental subsidies using a UK privatisation policy under which 3 million tenants have purchased their public-housing units at discounted rates rather than continue to access subsidised rents. Participating tenants accept purchase grants that are substantially smaller than the capitalised taxpayer cost of continuing to subsidise their rents. Our results suggest that by allowing public-housing households to re-optimise their housing consumption, the UK privatisation policy has generated efficiency savings worth at least 8-10% of the value of the public-housing stock.
Behavior seminar
Du 19/12/2024 de 11:00 à 12:00
R2-21
VON HINKE Stephanie (University of Bristol, Great Britain)
*
Economic History Seminar
Du 18/12/2024 de 12:30 à 14:00
R1-09
NOGUES-MARCO Pilar (Université de Genève)
Trade Imbalances or Silver Arbitrage? Anglo-Asian Bullion Flows in the Early Modern Period, 1664-1813
Silver was the most significant commodity money that connected global exchanges in the early modern period. It was transferred from America toward Asia, with Europe being the major transhipment region. Western scholars of intercontinental trade companies have traditionally interpreted silver flows as the capital balancing item used to settle persistent European trade deficits with Asia caused by the European demand for Asian commodities. Conversely, the California School argues that silver was exchanged for profit as it was cheap in the Western producing regions and expensive in the East because of large China's demand for silver. This view reverses causality because the export of Asian commodities (and gold) to Europe is interpreted as the balancing items used to pay for silver imports to Asia. Data on silver prices are needed to discriminate between the two competing narratives. This research measures the profitability of Euro-Asian arbitrage for silver (and gold) based on original hand-collected data from the East India Company archive in order to define the role of silver in shaping global connections in early modern long-distance trade.
Applied Economics Lunch Seminar
Du 17/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
WREN-LEWIS Liam (PSE)
*
Econometrics Seminar
Du 16/12/2024 de 16:00 à 17:15
TBD
BONHOMME Stéphane (University of Chicago)
TBA
Roy Seminar (ADRES)
Du 16/12/2024 de 16:00 à 17:15
R1-09
YUAN Yue (UCL)
*
Casual Friday Development Seminar - Brown Bag Seminar
Du 13/12/2024 de 13:00 à 14:00
R1-09
SHARMA Vrinda (PSE)
*
PSE Internal Seminar
Du 13/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
R1-15
GOBILLON Laurent (CNRS & PSE)
*
EU Tax Observatory Seminar
Du 13/12/2024 de 12:00 à 13:00
R1-14
KNEBELMANN Justine (Sciences Po)
tba
Travail et économie publique externe
Du 12/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 74014 Paris, salle R1-09
KUEBLER Dorothea (WZB)
The Gender Gap in Gender-Blind University Admissions
We examine China's gender-blind university admissions process and uncover a significant gender gap: equally qualified female students are substantially less likely to apply to and be admitted to elite universities compared to their male counterparts. By combining administrative and survey data, we show that this disparity is not driven by differences in risk aversion, strategic sophistication, confidence, or competitiveness. Instead, it is primarily explained by women's stronger preference for geographically proximate and education-focused universities. The survey data reveal that these preferences are less reflective of genuine aspirations and more influenced by parental expectations. Students' self-reports indicate that parents guide their daughters more toward nearby and education-focused universities compared to their sons. Moreover, women's actual application decisions are more affected by parental expectations and stereotypical beliefs than men's. These findings demonstrate that gender-specific parental expectations and social norms can lead to gender differences in admission outcomes even in an admissions system designed to be meritocratic and gender-neutral.
Behavior seminar
Du 12/12/2024 de 11:00 à 12:00
R2-21
WEBER ROBERTO (University of Zürich)
*
Paris Trade Seminar
Du 10/12/2024 de 14:30 à 16:00
Sciences Po, 28 rue des Saints-Pères, 75007 Paris (M° Saint Germain des Prés), salle H401 / Jean-Paul Fitoussi
BOEHM Johannes (IHEID)
*
Applied Economics Lunch Seminar
Du 10/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
GOEDDE Julius ()
*
Roy Seminar (ADRES)
Du 09/12/2024 de 16:00 à 17:15
R1-09
LEFOULLI Yassine (TSE)
*
Econometrics Seminar
Du 09/12/2024 de 16:00 à 17:15
TBD
HENRY Emeric (Penn State University)
TBA
Régulation et Environnement
Du 09/12/2024 de 11:00 à 12:15
REYNART Mathias (TSE)
*
Casual Friday Development Seminar - Brown Bag Seminar
Du 06/12/2024 de 13:00 à 14:00
R1-15
AHLBORN Laura (PSE)
*
EPCI (Economie politique du changement institutionnel) Seminar
Du 06/12/2024 de 11:00 à 12:30
MSE salle 116
DE ROBIANO Balthazar (European University Institute, Dpt of Social and Political Sciences)
Housing’s revenge on politics: the rise of tenure inequalities
This article presents a neglected change in housing policy in the last half-century in Europe and theorizes its potential on welfare: the rise of tenure inequalities. From a post-war politics of mass housing provision, West-European welfare States switched to a post-Fordist promotion of massive homeownership accession through mortgage credit. This change, hereunder called housing financialization, while initially associated with rising homeownership rates, has come to be associated with fast-rising housing prices, progressively excluding higher shares of households from accessing homeownership. This article finds that these processes are associated with higher housing costs for renters, more unequal housing costs amongst income groups and increasing inequalities in homeownership accession between income groups. Lower- and middle-income groups appear increasingly excluded from homeownership accession while simultaneously more disadvantaged on the rental market. This is termed ‘tenure inequalities’ and might underlie other phenomena observed in the literature such as refamiliarization and rising territorial inequalities
Brown Bag Economics of Innovation Seminar
Du 06/12/2024 de 10:30 à 12:30
Collège de France, 3 rue d'Ulm, 5005 Paris
AGHION Philippe(Collège de France)
ROULET Alexandra(INSEAD)
A Theory of Endogenous Degrowth and Environmental Sustainability.
Macroeconomics Seminar
Du 05/12/2024 de 16:00 à 17:15
PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, salle R2-21
GOTTFRIES Axel (U Edinburgh)
*
PEPES (Paris Empirical Political Economics) Working Group
Du 05/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:45
R2-01
QIAN Nancy (Northwestern University)
*
brown bag Travail et Économie Publique
Du 05/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 74014 Paris, salle R1-09
BEHAGHEL Luc (PSE)
The Impact of Retraining Programs on Firms' Labor Demand and Occupational Mobility
écrit avec Ghazala Azmat (Sciences-Po), Yagan Hazard (Collegio Alberto), Roland Rathelot (Crest) et Joyce Sultan (IPP)
We investigate the value of retraining programs in facilitating the mobility of workers into occupations in high demand. By sending 5,000 fictitious job applications to firms posting ads in six tight labor market occupations, we randomly vary the candidates' training and experience to compare labor demand for four profiles, all aged 21: an textit{incumbent} with both initial training and experience in the posted occupation, and three movers who initially trained and worked in a neighboring, tighter occupation. The movers differ by the extent of retraining they have undergone for the target occupation. Callback rates vary significantly, with the incumbent receiving the highest callbacks, closely followed by the long-retraining mover who underwent several weeks or months of retraining (59% and 51% callback rates, respectively). Untrained movers and short-retraining movers have significantly lower callback rates (30%). We observe notable heterogeneity across occupations, with long retraining yielding much more limited returns in some. We develop and test a matching model, predicting that the effect of retraining on callbacks should increase and then decrease with labor market tightness. Using variation in tightness within occupations, we find that even in the tight labor markets studied, the effect of retraining on callbacks continues to increase with rising tightness.
Behavior seminar
Du 05/12/2024 de 11:00 à 12:00
R2-21
SAFRA Lou (Sciences Po, Cevipof)
*
Development Economics Seminar
Du 04/12/2024 de 16:30 à 18:00
R2-01
SHAH Manisha (UC Berkeley)
*
Economic History Seminar
Du 04/12/2024 de 12:30 à 14:00
R1-09
ROBERTSON Charlotte (Harvard Business School)
*
Virtual Development Economics Seminar
Du 03/12/2024 de 16:00 à 17:00
Zoom
YANG Li (University of Michigan and BREAD)
*
GPET Seminar
Du 03/12/2024 de 13:30 à 17:00
R1-15
• Alessia Destefanis
• Marcelo Gantier-Mita (Bottom-up Conservation: Sub-national Protected Areas and Local Governance in Bolivia)
• Artur Obminski
• Bertille Evreux
Applied Economics Lunch Seminar
Du 03/12/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
PALUSKIEWICZ Luc ()
*
Régulation et Environnement
Du 02/12/2024 de 11:00 à 12:15
SCHRADER Jeff (Columbia)
*