Training and Research

Credits

5

Language

English

Class attendance

Free Choice

Location

VERONA

Learning objectives

This 20 hours/5 lectures PhD module combines theoretical and empirical approaches to outline economic and statistics arguments for the analysis of economic inequality.

The objective of the module is to address two key questions, raised by two of the main contributors to modern inequality analysis, that systematically emerge in public economics and in the policy literature: the first question, addressed by Amartya Sen, is “Inequality of what?”; the second question, that stems from the lifelong research of Tony Atkinson, is “What can be done?”

The first part of the module focuses on the first question. We will define and document evidence about different notions of inequality that are intertwined with micro- and macroeconomic analysis: inequality of income, inequality across the life-cycle, inequality across and within groups (such as cohorts, generations, regions, families, genders, skills, human capital). The module will then survey and organize result son the normative underpinnings of measurement and analysis of inequality and related concepts, such as poverty, and social welfare. Empirical issues arising when implementing these models (data and inference) will be also discussed. The presentation will emphasize differences between unidimensional (such as in income or in health) and multidimensional inequality (based on the joint distribution of income and health, or inequality of income along the life course) and will investigate related phenomena, such as (ethnic and income) polarization, segregation, mobility, equality of opportunity.

The second part of the module will move from the analysis of distributions to that of redistribution of income or of endowments. The theory of (optimal) redistribution will be reviewed, drawing distinctions between implementation and expected effects on inequality of taxation and of targeted and universal (in kind and in cash) transfers. The module will focus on ex-post evaluation of the distributional impact of policies. We will review the identification of causal treatment effects along the whole distribution of an outcome, as well discuss implementation using distribution regression methods. Selected applications of these methods to the evaluation of the effects of early intervention (i.e. education and human capital reforms, the so-called “pre-distribution”) on inequality will be presented.

Prerequisites and basic notions

Econometrics, microeconomics

Program

Lecturers: Francesco Andreoli (12hours), Claudio Zoli (8hours)

Topics:

1) FA: Inequality of what? This lecture introduces evidence about inequalities related to income (cardinal variable), education (discrete variable) and skills (ordinal variable) across individuals and families, along the lifecycle, and across groups defined by the cohort, the region of residence, the family background, gender. It also surveys main data sources and empirical strategies adopted in analyzing inequalities.

2) CZ: Foundations of inequality measurement. The lecture will illustrate the basic principle behind the measurement of inequality and some of the more common criteria adopted in this framework, such as risk, social welfare, Lorenz curves, stochastic dominance.

3) CZ: From unidimensional to multidimensional inequality. Will be highlighted the main challenges related to the extension of the framework of analysis to multidimensional distribution. This is the case for instance when considering distributions of bundles of different goods or, as is the case for the Human Development Index, when combining evaluations based on the distribution of income, health and education across the population.

4) FA: Inequality and related concepts: This lecture deepens the analysis of alternative concepts of inequality, such as inequality of opportunity and will present presenting data sources and empirical results produced in the recent years, including a discussion about the relation between inequality, mobility and equality of opportunity (represented by the so-called Great Gatsby curve). The lecture will also analyze the relation between the distribution of income across individuals and in space (segregation).

5) FA: Causal analysis of intervention: from average to distributional impacts of intervention. This lecture will discuss the fundamental problem of causal identification and will outline the most interesting theoretical effects for policy evaluation (ATE, CATE, ATT, LATE, ITT and QTE). Identification results for these effects will be presented, with a specific focus on implementation using distributional regression methods (DiD, CiC, RIF, RIF-DiD, Quantile Regression). Reweighing methods for counterfactual analysis will be introduced.

Selected teaching material and references will be distributed during the lecures.

Students can have a broad overview of frontier research in inequality at the following links:

- http://dse.univr.it/it/index.php/past-events-mainmenu-43 (Lecture material from the Winter School on Inequality and Social Welfare Theory organized by the DSE)
- https://opportunityinsights.org/ (Harvard-based lab on spatial inequality in US)
- https://wid.world/ (PSE-based database about trends in income inequality)
- https://inequality.stanford.edu/ (Stanford-based inequality lab)

Bibliography

Visualizza la bibliografia con Leganto, strumento che il Sistema Bibliotecario mette a disposizione per recuperare i testi in programma d'esame in modo semplice e innovativo.

When and where

In-presence lectures.

Learning assessment procedures

Students presentation based on selected readings agreed upon with the teachers.

Students with disabilities or specific learning disorders (SLD), who intend to request the adaptation of the exam, must follow the instructions given HERE

Assessment

Quality of the presentation; critical reading and discussion of the paper presented; adoption of appropriate terminology and tools.

Criteria for the composition of the final grade

Scele A+ to F.

PhD school courses/classes - 2022/2023

Faculty

A B C D F G L M N P Q R S T V Z

Andreoli Francesco

symbol email francesco.andreoli@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8102

Bracco Emanuele

symbol email emanuele.bracco@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8293

Bucciol Alessandro

symbol email alessandro.bucciol@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8278

Campolmi Alessia

symbol email alessia.campolmi@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8071

Cipriani Giam Pietro

symbol email giampietro.cipriani@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8271

Demo Edoardo

symbol email edoardo.demo@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8782 (VR) 0444.393930 (VI)

De Sinopoli Francesco

symbol email francesco.desinopoli@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 842 5450

Di Caterina Claudia

symbol email claudia.dicaterina@univr.it symbol phone-number 0458028247

Fiore Simona

symbol email simona.fiore@univr.it

Fioroni Tamara

symbol email tamara.fioroni@univr.it

Gnoatto Alessandro

symbol email alessandro.gnoatto@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8537

Levati Maria Vittoria

symbol email vittoria.levati@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8640

Mancini Cecilia

symbol email cecilia.mancini@univr.it

Menon Martina

symbol email martina.menon@univr.it

Minozzo Marco

symbol email marco.minozzo@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8234

Nicodemo Catia

symbol email catia.nicodemo@univr.it symbol phone-number +39 045 8028340

Pellegrini Letizia

symbol email letizia.pellegrini@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8345

Perali Federico

symbol email federico.perali@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8486

Peretti Alberto

symbol email alberto.peretti@univr.it symbol phone-number 0444 393936 (VI) 045 802 8238 (VR)

Pertile Paolo

symbol email paolo.pertile@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8438

Picarelli Athena

symbol email athena.picarelli@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 8028242

Piovesan Marco

symbol email marco.piovesan@univr.it symbol phone-number 045.80.28.104

Quercia Simone

symbol email simone.quercia@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8237

Renò Roberto

symbol email roberto.reno@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8526

Ricciuti Roberto

symbol email roberto.ricciuti@univr.it symbol phone-number 0458028417

Rossi Francesca

symbol email francesca.rossi_02@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8098

Scricciolo Catia

symbol email catia.scricciolo@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 8028341

Sommacal Alessandro

symbol email alessandro.sommacal@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8716

Svaluto Ferro Sara

symbol email sara.svalutoferro@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 8028783

Veronesi Marcella

symbol email marcella.veronesi@univr.it

Zarri Luca

symbol email luca.zarri@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8101

Zoli Claudio

symbol email claudio.zoli@univr.it symbol phone-number 045 802 8479

PhD students

PhD students present in the:

Nicodemo Catia

symbol email catia.nicodemo@univr.it symbol phone-number +39 045 8028340
Course lessons
PhD Schools lessons

Loading...

Guidelines for PhD students

Below you will find the files that contain the Guidelines for PhD students and rules for the acquisition of ECTS credits (in Italian: "CFU") for the Academic Year 2023/2024.

Documents

Title Info File
File pdf Guidelines PhD students pdf, en, 334 KB, 19/04/24
File pdf Linee guida dottorandi pdf, it, 251 KB, 19/04/24
File pdf Percorso formativo pdf, it, 283 KB, 19/04/24
File pdf Training program pdf, en, 358 KB, 19/04/24