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Featured researches published by Luca Piccoli.


Applied Economics | 2012

GDP and the Value of Family Caretaking: How Much Does Europe Care?

Gianna Claudia Giannelli; Lucia Mangiavacchi; Luca Piccoli

This study estimates the size and value of unpaid family caretaking activities at a European level. While at a country level several studies are available, a comprehensive evaluation for Europe as a whole was missing so far, mainly due to data limitations. This article fills this gap using a method that merges the information of the European Survey of Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) with the Harmonised European Time Use Surveys (HETUS). Monetary values of unpaid family domestic work and unpaid family childcare work are obtained applying both the opportunity cost and the market replacement approaches. For Europe as a whole, the total value of these activities ranges between 17% and 31.6% of the EU Gross Domestic Product (GDP), depending on the applied methodology. The national values of these activities are discussed and an interpretation of the country and gender differentials in family caretaking costs is given in terms of differences in culture, economic development and welfare state.


IZA Journal of Labor & Development | 2013

Do parents drink their children's welfare? Intra-household allocation of time between market labour, domestic work and child care in Russia

Gianna Claudia Giannelli; Lucia Mangiavacchi; Luca Piccoli

The aim of this paper is to investigate whether parental alcohol consumption leads to a reduction of child welfare. To this end, we analyse whether alcohol consumption decreases parents’ time spent looking after children and working. Using the Russia Longitudinal Monitoring Survey, we estimate a model of intra-household allocation of time for mono-nuclear families with children under fifteen years of age. We find that fathers’ alcohol consumption has a negative impact on their weekly hours spent doing child care, while no significant effect is observed for mothers’ alcohol consumption.JEL codesD1; I1; J13; J22


Economics and Human Biology | 2017

Parental alcohol consumption and adult children's educational attainment

Lucia Mangiavacchi; Luca Piccoli

HighlightsWe study the long run impact of parental alcohol consumption on education.A problem drinking mother hampers years of education, education grade and university degree.Transmission mechanisms suggested by the literature are tested.Major role for in utero exposure to alcohol and drinking during adolescence. Abstract This study analyses whether an excessive parental alcohol consumption during childhood can affect long run childrens educational attainments. Using 19 waves of the Russia Longitudinal Monitoring Survey (RLMS), where individuals and their families are followed from childhood to adulthood, this study analyses parental alcohol consumption during childhood (between 1994 and 2001) and its relation with childrens educational attainment about twelve years later (from 2005 to 2014). Panel estimations show that mothers excessive alcohol consumption during childhood is consistently negatively associated with children educational outcomes, as years of education, the highest education grade achieved and the probability of having a tertiary education degree, a finding that is robust to possible endogeneity issues. In particular, while moderate drinking is not an issue, an additional standard glass of vodka (15.57 g of pure alcohol) consumed by the mother per day, reduces years of education by almost one year (0.88), and by 5.8 percentage points (or about 27%) the probability of having a university degree. The study also explores the transmission mechanisms suggested by the literature, identifying a significant role for prenatal exposure to alcohol and, to a lesser extent, for intergenerational transmission of drinking habits.


Archive | 2010

Child Welfare in Albania Using a Collective Approach

Lucia Mangiavacchi; Federico Perali; Luca Piccoli


Children and Youth Services Review | 2011

Improving the measurement of child welfare in the context of intra-household inequality ☆

Lucia Mangiavacchi; Luca Piccoli


Archive | 2013

Would a euro's depreciation improve the French economy?

Riccardo Magnani; Luca Piccoli; Martine Carré; Amedeo Spadaro


Economica | 2015

Optimal Taxation, Social Preferences and the Four Worlds of Welfare Capitalism in Europe

Amedeo Spadaro; Luca Piccoli; Lucia Mangiavacchi


Review of Economics of the Household | 2018

Collective consumption: an application to the passive drinking effect

Martina Menon; Federico Perali; Luca Piccoli


Archive | 2013

Would a real depreciation of the euro improve the French economy

Riccardo Magnani; Luca Piccoli; Martine Carré; Amedeo Spadaro


Archive | 2009

Size and Value of Unpaid Family Work in Europe

Gianna Claudia Giannelli; Lucia Mangiavacchi; Luca Piccoli

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Lucia Mangiavacchi

University of the Balearic Islands

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Amedeo Spadaro

University of the Balearic Islands

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Martine Carré

Paris Dauphine University

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Salvador Balle

University of the Balearic Islands

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Leon Bettendorf

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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