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Dive into the research topics where Roberta Gatti is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberta Gatti.


Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization | 2001

Are women really the "fairer" sex? Corruption and women in government

David Dollar; Raymond Fisman; Roberta Gatti

Abstract Numerous behavioral studies have found women to be more trust-worthy and public-spirited than men. These results suggest that women should be particularly effective in promoting honest government. Consistent with this hypothesis, we find that the greater the representation of women in parliament, the lower the level of corruption. We find this association in a large cross-section of countries; the result is robust to a wide range of specifications.


Public Choice | 2002

Decentralization and Corruption: Evidence from U.S. Federal Transfer Programs

Raymond Fisman; Roberta Gatti

While some recent evidence suggests that more decentralizationis associated with reduced corruption, no empirical work hasexamined whether different types of decentralization havedifferential effects on corruption. The theoretical literaturehas emphasized that expenditure decentralization will only beeffective if accompanied by the devolution of revenuegeneration to local governments. In this paper we examine thishypothesis empirically, by studying the mismatch betweenrevenue generation and expenditure in U.S. states. Largerfederal transfers are associated with higher rates ofconviction for abuse of public office, supporting the theorythat soft-budget constraints created by federal transfers arepotentially problematic.


Journal of Human Resources | 2009

Why Should We Care About Child Labor? The Education, Labor Market, and Health Consequences of Child Labor

Kathleen Beegle; Rajeev H. Dehejia; Roberta Gatti

Despite the extensive literature on the determinants of child labor, the evidence on the consequences of child labor on outcomes such as education, labor, and health is limited. We evaluate the causal effect of child labor participation among children in school on these outcomes using panel data from Vietnam and an instrumental variables strategy. Five years subsequent to the child labor experience we find significant negative impacts on education, and also find a higher probability of wage work for those young adults who worked as children while attending school. We find few significant effects on health.


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 2005

Child labor: the role of financial development and income variability across countries.

Rajeev H. Dehejia; Roberta Gatti

In this article, we examine the link between child labor and financial development using cross‐country data. We show that child labor and financial development display a significant negative relationship, which is particularly strong in the sample of low‐income countries and is robust for a wide range of specifications and estimators, including fixed‐effects and instrumental variables. We identify a plausible channel through which financial development affects child labor, as we find that income variability has a sizable, positive impact on child labor in countries where financial markets are underdeveloped, although this is not the case when financial markets are developed. Our results suggest that policies aimed at widening access to credit could be effective in reducing the extent of child labor.


International Tax and Public Finance | 2009

Investing for the Old Age: Pensions, Children and Savings

Vincenzo Galasso; Roberta Gatti; Paola Profeta

In the last century most countries have experienced both an increase in pension spending and a decline in fertility. The authors argue that the interplay of pension generosity and development of capital markets is crucial to understand fertility decisions. Since children have traditionally represented for parents a form of retirement saving, particularly in economies with limited or non-existent capital markets, an exogenous increase of pension spending provides a saving technology alternative to children, thus relaxing financial (saving) constraints and reducing fertility. The authors build a simple two-period overlapping generations (OLG) model to show that an increase in pensions is associated with a larger decrease in fertility in countries in which individuals have less access to financial markets. Cross-country regression analysis supports result: an interaction between various measures of pension generosity and a proxy for the development of financial markets consistently enters the regressions positively and significantly, suggesting that in economies with limited financial markets, children represent a way for parents to save for old age, and that increases in pensions amount effectively to relaxing these constraints.


World Bank Publications | 2013

Jobs for Shared Prosperity : Time for Action in the Middle East and North Africa

Roberta Gatti; Matteo Morgandi; Rebekka E. Grun; Stefanie Brodmann; Diego F. Angel-Urdinola; Juan Manuel Moreno; Daniela Marotta; Marc Schiffbauer; Elizabeth Mata Lorenzo

Jobs are crucial for individual well-being. They provide a livelihood and, equally important, a sense of dignity. They are also crucial for collective well-being and economic growth. However, the rules and incentives that govern labor markets in Middle East and North Africa (MENA) countries have led to in efficient and inequitable outcomes, both individually and collectively. Several underlying distortions prevent a more productive use of human capital and have led to a widespread sense of unfairness and exclusion, of which the Arab Spring was a powerful expression. The Middle East and North Africa has a large reservoir of untapped human resources, with the worlds highest unemployment rate among youth and the lowest participation of females in the labor force. Desirable jobs, defined as high paying or formal jobs, are few, and private employment is overwhelmingly of low added value. Overall, the regions labor markets can be characterized as being in efficient, inequitable, and locked in low productivity equilibrium.


Journal of Economic Growth | 2006

Development, Democracy and Mass Killings

William Easterly; Roberta Gatti; Sergio Kurlat

Using a newly assembled dataset spanning from 1820 to 1998, we study the relationship between the occurrence and cruelty of episodes of mass killing and the levels of development and democracy across countries and over time. We find that massacres are more likely at intermediate levels of income and less likely at very high levels of democracy, but we do not find evidence of a linear relationship between democracy and probability of mass killings. In the 20th century, discrete improvements in democracy are systematically associated with less cruel massacre episodes. Episodes at the highest levels of democracy and income involve relatively fewer victims.


World Bank Other Operational Studies | 2014

Striving for better jobs : the challenge of informality in the Middle East and North Africa

Roberta Gatti; Diego F. Angel-Urdinola; Joana Silva; Andras Bodor

Economic growth has been sustained for many years pre-crisis in the region, but this has not resulted in the creation of an adequate number of jobs and has succeeded, at best, in generating low-quality, informal jobs. The report addresses one margin of exclusion: informal employment and the vulnerabilities and lack of opportunities associated with it. The report analyzes the constraints that prevent informal workers from becoming formal and discusses policy options to effectively address these constraints. This report looks at informality through a human development angle and focuses particularly on informal employment. Informality is a complex phenomenon, comprising unpaid workers and workers without social security or health insurance coverage, small or micro-firms that operate outside the regulatory framework and large registered firms that may partially evade corporate taxes and social security contributions. The first section provides a detailed profile of informal workers in the region. The second section describes the characteristics of informality in micro-firms that operate outside the regulatory framework and in larger firms that do not fully comply with social security contribution requirements and tax obligations. The third section presents informality and the firm. The fourth section focuses on informality: choice or exclusion? The fifth section discusses policy options for effectively expanding coverage of health insurance and pension systems and promoting the creation of better quality jobs.


Archive | 2008

The Consequences of Child Labor: Evidence from Longitudinal Data in Rural Tanzania

Kathleen Beegle; Rajeev H. Dehejia; Roberta Gatti; Sofya Krutikova

This paper exploits a unique longitudinal data set from Tanzania to examine the consequences of child labor on education, employment choices, and marital status over a 10-year horizon. Shocks to crop production and rainfall are used as instrumental variables for child labor. For boys, the findings show that a one-standard-deviation (5.7 hour) increase in child labor leads 10 years later to a loss of approximately one year of schooling and to a substantial increase in the likelihood of farming and of marrying at a younger age. Strikingly, there are no significant effects on education for girls, but there is a significant increase in the likelihood of marrying young. The findings also show that crop shocks lead to an increase in agricultural work for boys and instead lead to an increase in chore hours for girls. The results are consistent with education being a lower priority for girls and/or with chores causing less disruption for education than agricultural work. The increased chore hours could also account for the results on marriage for girls.


World Bank Publications | 2016

Being Fair, Faring Better

Roberta Gatti; Sandor Karacsony; Kosuke Anan; Celine Ferre; Carmen de Paz Nieves

Many Roma are among the poorest and most vulnerable Europeans, facing poverty, exclusion, and discrimination. In European Union member countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) with substantial Roma populations, inequalities between Roma and non-Roma start early and are striking. Some of these inequalities reflect hard-wired family circumstances. For example, a Roma child is much more likely to grow up in a household at the very bottom of the income distribution, or have parents with little or no education. Other inequalities reflect limited opportunities such as access to basic goods and services (e.g., quality education and adequate living conditions), which are necessary not only for realizing ones potential in life, but also for living with dignity. This book focuses on identifying pathways to promote fair chances for disadvantaged Roma in CEE countries. Investing early, by promoting good nutrition, cognitive child development, and access to quality education is a policy with recognized high returns, especially for disadvantaged children.

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