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Education Economics | 2011

Time to degree: students' abilities, university characteristics or something else? Evidence from Italy

Carmen Aina; Eliana Baici; Giorgia Casalone

We use a representative sample of Italian graduates drawn from the Consorzio AlmaLaurea to assess the impact of individual and family characteristics, university inputs and the labour market on the time taken to attain a degree. Our estimates highlight that all these dimensions drive the outcome analysed. Weak labour market prospects contribute particularly to length time to degree. Our results suggest that a comprehensive policy intervention is needed to increase the number of students graduating within the minimum period.


Review of Income and Wealth | 2013

Evaluating the Distributional Effects of Fiscal Policies Using Quantile Regressions

Giorgia Casalone; Daniela Sonedda

The objective of this paper is to propose and apply a new method to evaluate the distributional impact of fiscal policies and potential marginal reforms. The econometric tool adopted is structural quantile treatment effects regression, which allows a complete picture of the effects of the fiscal policy of interest on households with different incomes, abilities, and needs. We apply this method to personal income taxation and non�?cash transfers in Italy for the year 2004. Our estimates suggest that, although heterogeneous, the redistributive effects of the potential fiscal reforms are almost zero.


Economía & lavoro: rivista quadrimestrale di politica economica, sociologia e relazioni industriali | 2013

Il fuoricorsismo tra falsi miti e realtà

Carmen Aina; Eliana Baici; Giorgia Casalone; Francesco Pastore

The Italian university system has alwayssuffered from a high percentage of students whofail to complete their studies or find themselvesseriously lagging behind, the latter case beingthe focus of this article. It is a phenomenon thatinvolves a considerable waste of resources andskills. Reorganised and reworked here are a seriesof articles and commentaries published in blogsand online journals by the authors over the lastyear, also drawing upon the resulting extensiveexchanges with the readers. This has stimulatedfurther thinking, the fruit of which is this text.


AIEL Series in Labour Economics | 2015

Family Origin and Early School Leaving in Italy: The Long-Term Effects of Internal Migration

Carmen Aina; Giorgia Casalone; Paolo Ghinetti

The proportion of early school leavers in Italy is high by European Union standards. However, it is not uniformly distributed across the country: in Southern regions, it is almost double than in Centre-Northern area. This chapter goes beyond descriptive evidence and examines the conditional probability of leaving school with (at most) the compulsory schooling certificate in Italy using seven waves of Bank of Italy’s SHIW data, covering individuals born in the period from 1979 to 1995. Among various determinants, we focus on the role played by family origin. Our results show that youths born in the Centre-North with both parents from Southern Italy (second generation internal migrants) behave similarly to youths born and living in the South, so that they are more likely to drop out school earlier than comparable individuals born in the Centre-North with parents from the same area (natives). When only the household head is from the South, second generation migrants are similar to natives and the assimilation with native born in terms of schooling choices at the age of 14 is complete. Differences in family characteristics (education, financial conditions) are able to account for a large share of raw differences in education decisions between individuals born in Centre-North vs. South, as well as between natives and second generation migrants born in the Centre-North of Italy. The analysis of these dynamics over time shows that differences across groups of youths defined by their origin narrow since the mid- 2000.


Archive | 2011

Does time-to-degree matter? The effect of delayed graduation on employment and wages

Giorgia Casalone; Carmen Aina


Archive | 2010

Evaluating the distributional effects of the italian fiscal policies using quantile regressions

Giorgia Casalone; Daniela Sonedda


ERSA conference papers | 2005

Has human capital accounted for regional economic growth in italy? a panel analysis on the 1980-2001 period

Eliana Baici; Giorgia Casalone


Papers in Regional Science | 2015

Internal migration and educational outcomes in Italy: Evidence from a cohort of youths *

Carmen Aina; Giorgia Casalone; Paolo Ghinetti


Archive | 2015

An empirical assessment of households sorting into private schooling under public education provision

Francesco Andreoli; Giorgia Casalone; Daniela Sonedda


Investigaciones de Economía de la Educación volume 5 | 2010

Time-to-degree: Students' abilities, university characteristics or what else?

Carmen Aina; Eliana Baici; Giorgia Casalone

Collaboration


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Carmen Aina

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Eliana Baici

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Daniela Sonedda

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Paolo Ghinetti

University of Eastern Piedmont

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