Francesco Andreoli
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fandreoli83.bsky.social
Francesco Andreoli
@fandreoli83.bsky.social
Economist, Assoc Prof Verona and @Liser.lu, I do research about unfair inequality and what policy can do about it.
Reposted by Francesco Andreoli
Thanks to all participants for this wnderful event, we all learned a lot!
January 9, 2026 at 5:53 PM
Thanks to all participants for this wnderful event, we all learned a lot!
January 9, 2026 at 5:53 PM
Day 3 #IT19 - Alessandra Fogli at Minneapolis Fed on the within-city nature of inequality in the US. inter-gen mobility is lower in cities where poor/rich parents are more unequal and more segregated. A dynamic model sorts out causal links from endogenous feedbacks of inequality on segregation.
January 9, 2026 at 5:53 PM
Day 3 #IT19 - Fabrizio Perri at Minneapolis Fed on the implications of inflation for inequality, in income/consumption/wealth. Inflation has redistributive effects on wealth and PP that benefit young middle class (indebted), but negative effects on labour income, mostly for low educ group.
January 9, 2026 at 4:21 PM
Day 3 #IT19 - Aurelius Noble at Transcribus and Noah Sutter @lseechist.bsky.social on automated transcription of structured handwritten documents. Fascinating to see how deep learning methods can help produce new ready-to-use historic data from non-digitalized archives.
January 9, 2026 at 1:43 PM
Day 3 #IT19 - Maurizio Bussolo at WB on the urban gender premium in intergenerational mobility in South Asia.
January 9, 2026 at 1:43 PM
Day 3 #IT19 - Johanna Mollerstrom @georgemasonu.bsky.social on when is tricky to be a meritrocat (eccepts inequalities due to merit, rejects inequalities due to luck - a widely accepted distributional norm). One case is support for redistribution in presence of wealth transfers.
January 9, 2026 at 9:26 AM
Day2 #IT19 - Anthony Lepinteur @uni.lu on the impact of housing wealth on Subjective Well-Being. Easterlin paradox better explained by combination of own (+effect) and comparison (-effect) housing wealth on SWB, owing to the visibility of this form of wealth.
January 8, 2026 at 6:11 PM
Day 2 #IT19 - Alain Trannoy @amse-aixmarseille.fr on the value of land: urban production not convex but displays IRS generated by density. Density combined with scarsity of land generate rents related to location, which cumulate in housing values, i.e. 1/3 of wealth (in FR).
January 8, 2026 at 5:17 PM
Day 2 #IT19 - Neil Cummins @lseechist.bsky.social @lseinequalities.bsky.social on how combining historic register data, name estimatiors and a dynastic perspective improve our understanding of wealth inequalities. Name estimators give wealth IGE=.8, showing status persistence up to 20 generations!
January 8, 2026 at 4:23 PM
Day 2 #IT19 - Lab session by Andrea Del Pizzo @uc3meconomics.bsky.social on using census data for constructing name estimators under multiplicity, using covariates to understand drivers of transmission of advanta across generations. Name serve to group families.
Material on the Winter School website
January 8, 2026 at 4:23 PM
Day 2 #IT19 - Frank Cowell @lse-sticerd-case.bsky.social on wealth concentration at the top and the role of fertility and integen transmission to explain it. A multi-gen 3-stage model characterizes the wealth equilibrium distribution as Pareto, with inequality inversely related to family size.
January 8, 2026 at 10:28 AM
Day 2 #IT19 - Jan Stuhler @uc3meconomics.bsky.social on using "names" to link multi-gen data and estimate long-run intergen mobility. Compared to direct/TSTSLS estimators, indirect name-based/grouping estimators under multiplicity emphasize transission of most persistent traits. Sample overlap key.
January 8, 2026 at 10:28 AM
Day 1 - Emilia Del Bono ISER-Uni Essex on challenges in using socio-emotional skills for addressing human capital formation. Skills are latent, multi-dimensional objects that need to be estimated from multiple items. Measurement strategy is key to mitigate errors. The talk shows how.
January 7, 2026 at 6:21 PM
Day 1 - Teresa Munzi @lisdata.bsky.social and Philippe Van Kerm @uni.lu on wealth data hosted and harmonized at LIS. In combination with income, hamonized data highlight distributional aspects across countries, cohorts, families, SES, life-cycle by income and/or wealth. Important for ageing pop.
January 7, 2026 at 6:21 PM
Day 1 #IT19 - Lidia Ceriani UniVerona on using @forbes.com Billionaires data for addressing wealth concentration at the very top of the (global) distribution. The data are not a redy-made panel and a number of armonizations has to be made. The lab shows how, hands on.
January 7, 2026 at 2:23 PM
Day 1 #IT19 - @giorgiamenta.bsky.social on epigenetic clocks and the Mulit EpiGenetic Age indicator (which has to do with how the DNA is packed). Clocks are relevant for uncovering effects of environment exposure on DNA early in life, and how these affect major human capital investmets later on.
January 7, 2026 at 11:28 AM
Day 1 #IT19 - @paulhufe.net on the way of incorporating genetic information into the production function of skills and the causal role of education reforms in attenuating the genes-environment gradient. Identification may require within-family PGIs and exogenous variation in education reforms.
January 7, 2026 at 11:28 AM
Day 1 #IT19 - @rafaelahlskog.bsky.social on the extent at which genetics explains location choices and persistence of local inequalities across generations.
January 7, 2026 at 11:28 AM
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December 29, 2025 at 12:59 PM