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Freedom, Democracy and Economic Performance in the 21th Century

Freedom, Democracy and Economic Performance in the 21th Century

25/11/2024
Tim Besley
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II Spanish Workshop in Development Economics

II Spanish Workshop in Development Economics

24/10/2024 al 25/10/2024
Enrique Seira & David Evans
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Generosity and Wealth: Experimental Evidence from Bogotá Stratification

“Generosity and Wealth: Experimental Evidence from Bogotá Stratification"

07-10-2024
Mariana Blanco (University of Turin)
 


Private Colonialism in Africa

Private Colonialism in Africa

02-10-2024
Elías Papaioannou (Professor of Economics, London Business School)
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Eventos cursos anteriores


Causes and Consequences of Policy Uncertainty: Evidence from McGirt vs. Oklahoma

Causes and Consequences of Policy Uncertainty: Evidence from McGirt vs. Oklahoma

11-06-2024
Dominic Parker (Professor of Applied Economics at University of Wisconsin-Madison)
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Externalities of Marijuana Legalization: Marijuana Use in Non-Legalizing Statesk

Externalities of Marijuana Legalization: Marijuana Use in Non-Legalizing Statesk

20-05-2024
Elaine M. Liu (Professor of Economics at University of Houston)
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Do Homebuyers Value Energy Efficiency? Evidence From an Information Shock

Do Homebuyers Value Energy Efficiency? Evidence From an Information Shock

26-04-2024
Brendon McConnell (Associate Professor in the Economics Department at University of London)
 


The End of Oil

The End of Oil

25-04-2024
Ryan Kellogg (Professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy) (Research Associate at the National Bureau for Economic Research)
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If You Only Have a Hammer: Optimal Dynamic Prevention Policy

If You Only Have a Hammer: Optimal Dynamic Prevention Policy

20-03-2024
Christopher Rauh (Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge)
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Immigration and Worker Responses Across Firms: Evidence from Administrative Records in Colombia

Immigration and Worker Responses Across Firms: Evidence from Administrative Records in Colombia

13-02-2024
Lukas Delgado-Prieto (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid)
 


Cost-Sharing in Medical Care Can Increase Adult Mortality: Evidence from Colombia

Cost-Sharing in Medical Care Can Increase Adult Mortality: Evidence from Colombia

12-02-2024
Marcos Vera-Hernandez (University College London)
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Long-Run Effects of Land Redistribution: Evidence from India

Long-Run Effects of Land Redistribution: Evidence from India

07-02-2024
Kartikeya Batra (University of Maryland)
 


Incentives Justifying Nonconformity: Experimental Evidence from Motortaxi Organizations in Uganda

Incentives Justifying Nonconformity: Experimental Evidence from Motortaxi Organizations in Uganda

05-02-2024
Claude Raisaroa (Stockholm School of Economics)
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Does Performance Evidence Motivate? A Field Experiment in Guinea-Bissau’s Health Sector

Does Performance Evidence Motivate? A Field Experiment in Guinea-Bissau’s Health Sector

29-01-2024
Mattia Fracchia (Nova School of Business and Economics)
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Information, expectations and preferences: occupational choices of young adults in Uganda

Information, expectations and preferences: occupational choices of young adults in Uganda

26-01-2024
Cristina Clerici (Stockholm School of Economics)
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Accepting the unacceptable: Does intimate partner violence shape the tolerance of violence?

Accepting the unacceptable: Does intimate partner violence shape the tolerance of violence?

24-01-2024
Eugenia Frezza (Trinity College Dublin)
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Throwing gasoline on the cocaine production: the effect of a supply shock on violence

Throwing gasoline on the cocaine production: the effect of a supply shock on violence

22-01-2024
Monica Beeder (Norwegian School of Economics)
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Hidden moral costs of control: Field evidence from performance appraisals in the public sector

Hidden moral costs of control: Field evidence from performance appraisals in the public sector

13-11-2023
Marcela Ibanez (University of Göttingen)
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Changing Phenology: Evidence from Nigeria

Changing Phenology: Evidence from Nigeria

5-10-2023
Ivan Kim Taveras (Bocconi University)
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Mobile Internet and Political Polarization

Mobile Internet and Political Polarization

4-9-2023
Nikita Melnikov (Universidade NOVA de Lisboa)
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Fairness in times of crisis: Negative shocks, relative income, and preferences for redistribution

Fairness in times of crisis: Negative shocks, relative income, and preferences for redistribution

9-2-2023
Anna Hochleitner (University of Nottingham)
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Nation-Building Through Military Service

Nation-Building Through Military Service

31-1-2023
Juan Pedro Ronconi (Brown U)
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Medicaid for middle-class families? Job loss and health insurance coverage of parents and children

Medicaid for middle-class families? Job loss and health insurance coverage of parents and children

30-1-2023
Mariana Zerpa (KU Leuven)
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Legal uncertainty and its consequences: A natural language processing approach

Legal uncertainty and its consequences: A natural language processing approach

27-1-2023
Maximiliano Sosa (Uppsala)
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The Effect of a Conditional Cash Transfer on Child Marriage: Evidence from Mexico

The Effect of a Conditional Cash Transfer on Child Marriage: Evidence from Mexico

25-1-2023
Dalila Bernardino (EUI)
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Labor Market Power, Self-employment, and Development

Labor Market Power, Self-employment, and Development

13-12-2022
Francesco Amodio (McGill University)
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Comparative Advantage and Technology Diffusion: a Menu-based Approach to Dissemination

Comparative Advantage and Technology Diffusion: a Menu-based Approach to Dissemination

14-11-2022
Karen Macours (Paris School of Economics)
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The Role of Meritocracy and Pay Progression in the Public Sector

The Role of Meritocracy and Pay Progression in the Public Sector

10-10-2022
Gianmarco León-Ciliotta (Universidad Pompeu Fabra)
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Secondary School Access Raises Primary School Achievement in Tanzania

Secondary School Access Raises Primary School Achievement in Tanzania

12-9-2022
Wayne Sandholtz (Nova School of Business and Economics)
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Stay, split or strike: theory and evidence on secessionist vs centrist conflict

Stay, split or strike: theory and evidence on secessionist vs centrist conflict

13-6-2022
Sabine Flamand (Universitat Rovira i Virgili)
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Who Watches the Watchmen? Local News and Police Behavior in the United States

Who Watches the Watchmen? Local News and Police Behavior in the United States

9-5-2022
Nicola Mastrorocco (Trinity College)
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Claves económicas de la guerra Rusia - Ucrania

Claves económicas de la guerra Rusia - Ucrania

16-3-2022
Rafael Pampillón (IE Business School), Luis Ravina (Universidad de Navarra) y Emili J. Blasco (Universidad de Navarra)
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Energy and Environmental Issues in Developing Countries

Energy and Environmental Issues in Developing Countries

28-2-2022
Niclas Moneke, Jevgenijs Steinbuks, Jacopo Bonan, Carlo Andrea Bollino, Raúl Bajo-Buenestado, Paloma Grau, Luis Ravina
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Urban deprivation: from Earth Observation to Urban Policies

Urban deprivation: from Earth Observation to Urban Policies

10-12-2021
Monika Kuffer, Stefanos Georganos, Pere Roca, Anthony Boanada-Fuchs
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Checks and Balances and Nation Building

Checks and Balances and Nation Building

30-11-2021
Agustín Casas (CUNEF Universidad)
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The trend-cycle connection

The trend-cycle connection

4-10-2021
Hernán Seoane (UC3M)
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Educational Mobility Across Multiple Generations in Indonesia

Educational Mobility Across Multiple Generations in Indonesia

13-9-2021
Jan Stuhler (UC3M)
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NOTICIAS

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Volver 2022_07_05_campomanes

El investigador residente del NCID Ignacio Campomanes obtiene una beca del Atlantic Council y el Acton Institute para investigar sobre las dimensiones de la libertad

05 | 07 | 2022

El Freedom and Prosperity Center del Atlantic Council y el Acton Institute han concedido a Ignacio P. Campomanes, investigador residente del Navarra Center for International Development (NCID) del Instituto Cultura y Sociedad de la Universidad de Navarra, una beca para financiar un proyecto de investigación titulado "Caminos hacia la prosperidad: Interacciones entre Estado de Derecho, Libertad Económica y Política". Estas becas tienen como objetivo promover la investigación que explora los conceptos de libertad y democracia y los mecanismos a través de los cuales afectan a la prosperidad general.

"Una simple mirada al mundo actual revela una imagen clara: los países más prósperos son, casi sin excepción, democracias consolidadas en las que se preservan y defienden la libertad y los derechos fundamentales", explica el investigador del NCID Ignacio P. Campomanes.

El también profesor de Economía de la Universidad de Navarra añade que "los ejemplos históricos y actuales de democracias que no han sido capaces de generar prosperidad para sus ciudadanos demuestran que la libertad y la democracia no son condiciones suficientes para el desarrollo económico".

De hecho, según Campomanes, "el fuerte crecimiento económico de China y otros países no democráticos en las últimas décadas podrían llevar a algunos a la conclusión de que la libertad ni siquiera es necesaria para generar una prosperidad creciente, dificultando la aceptación de valores liberales y democráticos por parte de los países menos desarrollados del mundo, y favoreciendo la ola de populismo y retroceso democrático en países desarrollados".

Este proyecto de investigación pretende arrojar luz sobre el debate libertad-prosperidad desarrollando un nuevo marco teórico que desagrega las diferentes dimensiones de la libertad (legal, económica y política), analiza sus interacciones y vínculos y los mecanismos a través de los cuales afectan al desarrollo y la prosperidad. La primera fase del proyecto, que se desarrollará de julio a diciembre de 2022, ha recibido una financiación de 54,072 euros por parte del Atlantic Council y el Acton Institute. Se centrará en revisar la definición de dichas dimensiones de la libertad propuestos desde los campos del derecho, la ciencia política y la economía, así como los indicadores existentes para medir su nivel en los distintos países y periodos de tiempo.

Ignacio P. Campomanes es licenciado en Economía y Derecho por la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (2010) y doctor en Economía por la Universidad de Minnesota (2018). Durante el curso 2018/2019 fue becario posdoctoral en el National Bureau of Economic Research y, desde 2019, es investigador residente en el NCID.

La investigación de Campomanes se centra en la intersección entre la economía política y la macroeconomía con proyectos sobre temas como la relación de la desigualdad y la movilidad social con la redistribución fiscal y el crecimiento económico, la eficacia de la ayuda exterior cuando hay restricciones políticas o los determinantes dinámicos de las uniones político-económicas.