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Dive into the research topics where Margherita Fort is active.

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Featured researches published by Margherita Fort.


The Economic Journal | 2009

Changes in Compulsory Schooling, Education and the Distribution of Wages in Europe

Giorgio Brunello; Margherita Fort; Guglielmo Weber

Using data from 12 European countries and the variation across countries and over time in the changes of minimum school leaving age, we study the effects of the quantity of education on the distribution of earnings. We find that compulsory school reforms significantly affect educational attainment, especially among individuals belonging to the lowest quantile of the distribution of ability. Contrary to previous findings in the relevant literature, we find that additional education reduces wage inequality below median income and increases it above median income. There is also evidence in our data that education and ability are complements in the production of human capital and earnings. While these results support an elitist education policy – more education to the brightest, they also suggest that investing in the less fortunate but bright could payoff both on efficiency and on equity grounds.


Health Economics | 2016

The Causal Effect of Education on Health: What is the Role of Health Behaviors?

Giorgio Brunello; Margherita Fort; Nicole Schneeweis; Rudolf Winter-Ebmer

We investigate the causal effect of education on health and the part of it that is attributable to health behaviors by distinguishing between short-run and long-run mediating effects: whereas, in the former, only behaviors in the immediate past are taken into account, in the latter, we consider the entire history of behaviors. We use two identification strategies: instrumental variables based on compulsory schooling reforms and a combined aggregation, differencing, and selection on an observables technique to address the endogeneity of both education and behaviors in the health production function. Using panel data for European countries, we find that education has a protective effect for European men and women aged 50+. We find that the mediating effects of health behaviors-measured by smoking, drinking, exercising, and the body mass index-account in the short run for around a quarter and in the long run for around a third of the entire effect of education on health.


Archive | 2011

More Schooling, More Children: Compulsory Schooling Reforms and Fertility in Europe

Margherita Fort; Nicole Schneeweis; Rudolf Winter-Ebmer

We study the relationship between education and fertility, exploiting compulsory schooling reforms in Europe as source of exogenous variation in education. Using data from 8 European countries, we assess the causal effect of education on the number of biological kids and the incidence of childlessness. We find that more education causes a substantial decrease in childlessness and an increase in the average number of children per woman. Our findings are robust to a number of falsification checks and we can provide complementary empirical evidence on the mechanisms leading to these surprising results.


Journal of Labor Economics | 2018

The Tower of Babel in the Classroom: Immigrants and Natives in Italian Schools

Rosario Maria Ballatore; Margherita Fort; Andrea Ichino

We exploit rules of class formation to identify the causal effect of increasing the number of immigrants in a classroom on natives’ test scores, keeping class size and quality of the two types of students constant (pure ethnic composition [PEC] effect). We explain why this is a relevant policy parameter although it has been neglected so far. The PEC effect is sizable and negative (16% of a standard deviation) on language and math scores. For first-generation immigrants, it is more negative (30% of a standard deviation). Estimates that cannot control for endogenous adjustments implemented by principals are instead considerably smaller.


The Economic Journal | 2016

Is Education Always Reducing Fertility? Evidence from Compulsory Schooling Reforms

Margherita Fort; Nicole Schneeweis; Rudolf Winter-Ebmer

We study the relationship between education and fertility, exploiting compulsory schooling reforms in England and Continental Europe, implemented between 1936 and 1975. We assess the causal effect of education on the number of biological children and the incidence of childlessness. While we find a negative relationship between education and fertility in England, this result cannot be confirmed for Continental Europe. The additional education generated by schooling expansions on the Continent did not lead to a decrease in the number of biological children nor to an increase in childlessness. These findings are robust to a number of sensitivity and falsification checks.


Archive | 2013

Testing the Internal Validity of Compulsory School Reforms as Instrument for Years of Schooling

Giorgio Brunello; Margherita Fort; Guglielmo Weber; Christoph T. Weiss

In the large empirical literature that investigates the causal effects of education on outcomes such as health, wages and crime, it is customary to measure education with years of schooling, and to identify these effects using the exogenous variation provided by school reforms increasing compulsory education and minimum school leaving age. If these reforms are correlated to changes in school quality, and school quality is an omitted variable, this identification strategy may fail. We test whether this is the case by using the information provided by two distinct test scores on mathematics and reading and find that we cannot reject the internal validity of this popular identification strategy.


Archive | 2011

Teams or Tournaments? A Field Experiment on Cooperation and Competition in Academic Achievement

Maria Bigoni; Margherita Fort; Mattia Nardotto; Tommaso Reggiani

This paper assesses the effect of two stylized and antithetic non-monetary incentive schemes on students’ effort. We collect data from a field experiment where incentives are exogenously imposed, performance is monitored and individual characteristics are observed. Students are randomly assigned to a tournament scheme that fosters competition between coupled students, a cooperative scheme that promotes information sharing and collaboration between students and a control treatment in which students can neither compete, nor cooperate. In line with theoretical predictions, we find that competition induces higher effort with respect to cooperation and cooperation does not increase effort with respect to the baseline. However, this is true only for men, while women do not seem to react to non-monetary incentives.


B E Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy | 2015

Cooperation or Competition? A Field Experiment on Non-monetary Learning Incentives

Maria Bigoni; Margherita Fort; Mattia Nardotto; Tommaso Reggiani

Abstract We assess the effect of two antithetic non-monetary incentive schemes based on grading rules on students’ effort, using experimental data. We randomly assigned students to a tournament scheme that fosters competition between paired up students, a cooperative scheme that promotes information sharing and collaboration between students and a baseline treatment in which students can neither compete nor cooperate. In line with theoretical predictions, we find that competition induces higher effort with respect to cooperation, whereas cooperation does not increase effort with respect to the baseline treatment. Nonetheless, we find a strong gender effect since this result holds only for men while women do not react to this type of non-monetary incentives.


46TH SCIENTIFIC MEETING OF THE ITALIAN STATISTICAL SOCIETY | 2012

Unconditional and Conditional Quantile Treatment Effect: Identification Strategies and Interpretations

Margherita Fort

This paper reviews strategies that allow one to identify the effects of policy interventions on the unconditional or conditional distribution of the outcome of interest. This distiction is irrelevant when one focuses on average treatment effects since identifying assumptions typically do not affect the parameters interpretation. Conversely, finding the appropriate answer to a research question on the effects over the distribution requires particular attention in the choice of the identification strategy. Indeed, quantiles of the conditional and unconditional distribution of a random variable carry a different meaning even if identification of both these set of parameters may require conditioning on observed covariates.


Games and Economic Behavior | 2013

Information and Learning in Oligopoly: An Experiment

Maria Bigoni; Margherita Fort

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Nicole Schneeweis

Johannes Kepler University of Linz

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Rudolf Winter-Ebmer

Johannes Kepler University of Linz

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Giorgio Brunello

Ifo Institute for Economic Research

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Giorgio Brunello

Ifo Institute for Economic Research

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