Federica Saliola
World Bank
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Publication
Featured researches published by Federica Saliola.
Archive | 2013
Andrea Dall'Olio; Mariana Iootty; Naoto Kanehira; Federica Saliola
This paper tests whether structural or firm-specific characteristics contributed more to (labor) productivity growth in the European Union between 2003 and 2008. It combines the Amadeus firm-level data on productivity and firm characteristics with country-level data describing regulatory environments from the World Banks Doing Business surveys, foreign direct investment data from Eurostat, infrastructure quality assessments from the Global Competitiveness Report, and credit availability from the World Development Indicators. It finds that among the 12 newest members of the European Union, country characteristics are most important for firm productivity growth, particularly the stock of inward foreign direct investment and the availability of credit. By contrast, among the more developed 15 elder European Union member countries, firm-level characteristics, such as industry, size, and international affiliation, are most important for growth. The quality of the regulatory environment, measured by Doing Business indicators, is importantly correlated with productivity growth in all cases. This finding suggests that European Union nations can realize significant benefits from improving regulations and encouraging inward and outward foreign direct investment.
Archive | 2018
Tania Ghossein; Asif Islam; Federica Saliola
The quality of the public procurement system of an economy can have far-reaching effects on the private sector. This paper empirically explores several of these effects using two rich data sets. An overall indicator of public procurement quality is created from the World Bank?s Benchmarking Public Procurement project that is then combined with firm-level data from the World Bank Enterprise Surveys. The analysis includes more than 59,000 firms spanning more than 109 economies. The paper finds that firms in economies with good public procurement systems are more likely to participate in public procurement, face lower losses from shipping to domestic markets, and experience lower incidence of bribery than economies with poor public procurement systems. Similarly, better public procurement systems are positively correlated with more engagement in innovation, research and development, international certification, foreign technology adoption, and online connectivity.
Archive | 2017
Simeon Djankov; Tania M. Ghossein; Asif Islam; Federica Saliola
Public procurement regulation is an important instrument for using public resources efficiently and ensuring quality services to citizens. On average, the public procurement sector accounts for 14.5 percent of the gross domestic product globally. Using new data, this study documents public procurement regulation and related processes in 142 economies. Scores for three public procurement areas are constructed and amalgamated into an overall quality of public procurement index. The index is then related to a measure of road quality across countries. The results indicate that improvement in the public procurement system improves road quality, especially in non-Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries.
Cambridge Journal of Economics | 2008
Carlo Pietrobelli; Federica Saliola
Archive | 2007
Carlo Pietrobelli; Federica Saliola
Archive | 2018
Simeon Djankov; Federica Saliola; Rong Decid Chen; Davida Louise Connon; Ana Paula Cusolito; Ugo Gentilini; Asif Islam; Shwetlena Sabarwal; Indhira Vanessa Santos; Yucheng Zheng
Central Bank Review | 2018
Murat Şeker; Federica Saliola
Archive | 2015
Maria Paula Gutierrez Casadiego; Elisabeth Danon; Tania Ghossein; Natalia Del Valle Catoni; Raquel Maria Mayer Cuesta; Augusto Lopez Claros; Federica Saliola; Sophie Pouget
Archive | 2014
Andrea Dall'Olio; Mariana Iootty; Naoto Kanehira; Federica Saliola
Archive | 2008
Carlo Pietrobelli; Federica Saliola