Search results for "Italian Regions"

showing 6 items of 16 documents

Labor Productivity and Okun’s law: An empirical application to Italian regional panel data

2012

Okun’s law, named for its proposer, Arthur Okun, was first applied during the 1960s in the USA to describe the relationship between economic growth and unemployment fluctuations. Several attempts were later made to test the empirical applicability of the relationship to different countries and historical periods. Heterogeneous results were generally found in estimating Okun’s coefficient, depending on the sample and context analysed. The main goal of this paper is to analyze the relevance of Okun’s law to Italian regions. We perform a panel analysis to estimate the influence of asymmetry and local market differences on Okun’s relationship. Moreover, observing particularly low values of part…

Settore SECS-S/03 - Statistica EconomicaOkun’s Law Asymmetry Italian Regions Employment Unemployment
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Postgraduate education and job mismatch in Italy: Does migration help?

2023

Doctoral graduates represent the pinnacle of education. While the importance of increasing their number has been recognised by the Italian government and there has been a huge increase in the number of publicly funded PhD scholarships, doctoral graduates still struggle in the labour market to find employment commensurate with their skills and competencies. It is against this backdrop that the role of migration becomes crucial. Exploiting Italian microdata at the census level, this study aims to investigate how human capital migration, occurring at different ‘times’ of individual's life and across different regions, could mitigate the potential education–job mismatch, which is measured here …

Settore SECS-S/03 - Statistica Economicaeducation–job mismatch human capital migration Italian regions PhD
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Firm demography and regional development: evidence from Italy

2017

This article contributes to the literature on firm demography and regional development in at least three different ways. First, consumption, rather than employment, which is the most common variable seen in literature, is used to measure the impact of firm demography on regional development. Second, while the literature is mainly focused on the relationship between new business formation and regional development, we investigate both entry and exit flows of firms. Third, we decompose each of these flows into spatial and sectoral components. The empirical investigation looks at the Italian regions with reference to the period 2004–2009. Results seem to be substantially divergent between the S…

Settore SECS-S/03 - Statistica Economicafirm demography regional development consumption spatial shift-share Italian regions
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A spatial and sectoral analysis of firm demography in Italy

2013

firm demography crisis spatial shift-share Italian regionsSettore SECS-S/03 - Statistica Economica
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Spatial and Sectoral Features of the Firm Demography in Italy

2014

firm entry firm exit 2007 crisis spatial shift-share Italian regions
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A New Spatial Shift‐Share Decomposition: An Application to Tourism Competitiveness in Italian Regions

2020

The paper proposes a new version of spatial shift-share decomposition to improve on the various approaches to conventional shift-share analysis found in the literature. The novelty of our proposal is that it enables researchers to assess spatial competitiveness effects controlling for the influence of industrial specialization at both regional and neighborhood level. This new version is applied to inbound tourism in Italian regions and enables us to identify the best and worst performers. Our empirical results identify favorable scenarios in some areas of the country, such as Sardinia as well as regional advantage in a sizeable number of well-known destinations.

tourism competitiveneGeographySpatial shiftItalian regionsGeography Planning and DevelopmentDecomposition (computer science)spatial shift-share analysiEconomic geographyTourismEarth-Surface ProcessesGeographical Analysis
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