Title Information
Title
Essays in Public and Labor Economics
Type of Resource (primo)
dissertations
Name: Personal
Name Part
Spaziani, Sara
Role
Role Term: Text
creator
Name: Personal
Name Part
Friedman, John
Role
Role Term: Text
Advisor
Name: Personal
Name Part
Knight, Brian
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Personal
Name Part
Hull, Peter
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Corporate
Name Part
Brown University. Department of Economics
Role
Role Term: Text
sponsor
Origin Information
Copyright Date
2024
Physical Description
Extent
xxi, 316 p.
digitalOrigin
born digital
Note: thesis
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Brown University, 2024
Genre (aat)
theses
Abstract
In this dissertation, I study how public policies and economic shocks impact workers, employers, and the structure of the labor market, aiming to inform optimal policy design and reduce existing inequalities. Chapter 1 studies the optimal design of unemployment insurance financing policies, comparing two approaches to assign unemployment tax rates to employers: assigning individualized rates in proportion to the benefit spending resulting from employers’ layoffs (experience rating) and assigning the same tax rate to all the employers (coinsurance). I derive a sufficient-statistics formula defining the optimal degree of experience rating through a tradeoff between the marginal benefits and costs of coinsurance. Then, I estimate with quasi-experiments or calibrate these benefits and costs for Colorado and South Carolina to evaluate the optimality of their policies. I find that the marginal cost of coinsurance exceeded the benefit in South Carolina, suggesting that its degree of experience rating was suboptimal. Consistent with its higher degree of experience rating, I find the opposite for Colorado. Chapter 2 studies whether gender quotas governing municipal elections promote the election of female mayors. The quotas mandate minimum female representation in electoral lists and government bodies, but do not directly target mayoral positions. Their impact on mayoral representation hinges on the existence of spillover effects. I leverage the adoption of three gender quota policies in large Italian municipalities and use event-study and regression discontinuity methods to decompose the aggregate effects of the quotas into mechanical effects, due to compliance, and residual spillover, effects. The quotas increased female representation in lower-level government positions beyond legal requirements but had no impact on mayoral positions. Chapter 3 investigates gender disparities in the labor market effects of COVID-19 for skilled Ugandan workers. Leveraging a high-frequency panel, we find that the Ugandan lockdowns disproportionately reduced female employment, generating a novel employment gender gap which persisted for eighteen months. Additionally, the lockdowns shifted women from wage-employment to self-employment and into unskilled sectors, and widened the gender pay gap. Women’s pre-pandemic sorting into severely hit economic sectors and childcare responsibilities induced by schools’ closure explain up to 65% of the employment gap.
Subject
Topic
Public Economics
Subject
Topic
Political Economy
Subject (fast) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/00989943")
Topic
Labor economics
Subject
Topic
gender economics
Subject
Topic
Applied microeconomics
Language
Language Term (ISO639-2B)
English
Record Information
Record Content Source (marcorg)
RPB
Record Creation Date (encoding="iso8601")
20240501