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Publication
Featured researches published by Vanesa Valeria D'Elia.
Revista de Analisis Economico – Economic Analysis Review | 2013
Vanesa Valeria D'Elia; Ana Ines Navarro
This paper empirically explores the effect of the Universal Child Allowance –a conditional Cash Transfer Program recently launched in Argentina– on backwardness in school. Specifically, we evaluate whether children enrolled in the program closed their education gap, differentiating between children and adolescents. Using propensity score as a prelude to the estimation of regression, we found preliminary evidence that the government subsidy affects primary and secondary students differently. The results are robust to different uses of the different samples and comparison samples observation.
Archive | 2011
Ana Ines Navarro; Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
This paper empirically explores the effect of the Universal Child Allowance recently launched in Argentina on children’s schooling achievement. By implementing Crump, Hotz, Imbens and Mitnik (2006), we use propensity score as a precursor to regression estimation finding preliminary evidence that the allowance affect differently primary students and secondary ones. The results are robust to the uses of different samples and different observational-comparison sample.
Archive | 2011
Mariana Conte Grand; Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
At the time of Argentina´s greenhouse gases emissions reduction voluntary commitment, most of the articles on intensity targets had not been published. The aim of this paper is to (re)discuss briefly the proposal made by Argentina taking into account that literature. To justify the adopted target form and stringency, we compare fixed and dynamic targets in terms of the likelihood of “hot air”, the relationship between allowed emissions and GDP, the link between abatement and GDP, and outcomes´ dispersion. But, the assumptions implicit in the design of the target may change those properties. We show how the BAU scenario taken as reference and the level of emissions reduction affects targets´ design and characteristics. Finally, considering different emissions projections, we perform a comparison between allowed emissions and projected ones during the first half commitment period (2008-2010), concluding that compliance with the commitment depends on the data source used in the calculations.
International Journal of Green Economics | 2017
Mariana Conte Grand; Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
The aim of this paper is to study the relationship between Emissions-GDP functional form and decoupling behaviour in developed and developing countries. With data for the period 1960-2012 for 27 European countries and 18 CELAC nations, this research employs a Box-Cox specification to capture the CO2 emissions-GDP connection, considering, at the same time, the time-series properties of both variables. We find that the Box-Cox functional form describes better the relationship between income and pollution in UE and CELAC countries, but there are differences regarding decoupling behaviour. Many European countries have increased economic activity while decreasing emissions, but that behaviour is not observed among CELAC nations. Except when delinking between CO2 and GDP is strong, this mismatch between functional form and decoupling is explained because the type of decoupling depends on both the slope of the relationship between emissions and GDP and on the level of both indicators.
Archive | 2013
Mariana Conte Grand; Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
With CAIT WRI data for those countries which submitted quantifiable CO2 emission caps under the Copenhagen Agreement, this note supports the existence of a long run relationship between CO2 emissions and GDP in 11 of the 26 countries in our sample over the period 1980-2008. However, the functional specification of that relationship is not homogenous among nations, being linear for 2 countries, log-log for 2 other cases, while the relationship follows a Box-Cox functional form for 7 nations. Elasticities of the emissions-income relationship also differ among counties. But in most cases (8 out of 11), the magnitude of the average elasticity is less than 1 (emissions increase less than GDP).
Archive | 2008
Mariana Conte Grand; Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
The relationship between lifestyle choices and health has been widely studied in the epidemiological and economic literature. In the last years, empirical research was directed towards the use of recursive systems with structural equations for a health production function and reduced form equations for lifestyles. As a result, behaviors toward health are taken to be determined by exogenous socio-economic variables. In this article, we show that health is a key determinant of health habits. When people feel well, they adopt less healthy behaviors. We use maximum simulated likelihood for a multivariate 5 equation probit model. In that model, lifestyles (diet, exercise, alcohol consumption and smoking) are a function of exogenous socioeconomic variables and self-reported health. Self-reported health varies with socio-economic characteristics and depends on health indicators that are the consequence of lifestyles undertaken in the past (i.e., overweight, blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol levels). Data is that of adults in Argentina´s 2005 Risk Factors National Survey. We find that health partial effects on lifestyle are much larger having accounted for health endogeneity. Accounting for unobservable variables that jointly determine all lifestyles does not change much the magnitude of our results. Our findings are robust to different specifications.
Archive | 2005
Mariana Conte Grand; Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
International Journal of Sustainable Development | 2012
Mariana Conte Grand; Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
Revista de economía institucional | 2009
Vanesa Valeria D'Elia
Revista de Economía Institucional | 2009
Vanesa Valeria D'Elia