Coleção de Artigos em Andamento [Working Papers]

URI permanente para esta coleçãohttps://repositorio.insper.edu.br/handle/11224/3233

Navegar

Resultados da Pesquisa

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 15
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Occupy government: democracy and the dynamics of personnel decisions and public sector performance
    (2019) Ferreira, Fernando V; Barbosa, Klenio
    We study the causes and consequences of patronage in Brazilian cities since the country’s re democratization. Our data consist of the universe of local public sector employees merged with their party affiliations, and a dynamic regression discontinuity design is applied to deal with the endogeneity of patronage. Elections have consequences for patronage, with winning political coalitions increasing their shares of public sector workers and wages by 3-4 percentage points during a mayoral term, and also occupying civil servant jobs to perform key service-oriented tasks in education and public health. This type of patronage accounts for more than half of the dramatic increase in public sector political employment since the Brazilian re-democratization. The political occupation of government jobs is not associated with ideology, though. Instead, lack of accountability and rent-seeking are the primary driving forces, while reliance on intergovernmental transfers only increases patronage for smaller cities. Finally, we estimate the long-term consequences of this political occupation for fiscal outcomes conditions and for the quality of education and health care services. More political occupation does not affect the size of local governments, but it changes the composition of expenditures and public workers: the hiring of politically connected workers crowds out, practically one-to-one, non-affiliated teachers and doctors. The increased political occupation in Brazilian cities resulted in negative long term outcomes for local citizens in the form of less years of formal schooling and higher mortality rates.
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Reducing crime through environmental design: evidence from a randomized experiment of street lighting in New York City
    (2019) Chalfin, Aaron; Hansen, Benjamin; Lerner, Jason; Parker, Lucie
    This paper offers experimental evidence that crime can be successfully reduced by changing the situational environment that potential victims and offenders face. We focus on a ubiquitous but surprisingly understudied feature of the urban landscape – street lighting – and report the first experimental evidence on the effect of street lighting on crime. Through a unique public partnership in New York City, temporary streetlights were randomly allocated to public housing developments from March through August 2016. We find evidence that communities that were assigned more lighting experienced sizable reductions in crime. After accounting for potential spatial spillovers, we find that the provision of street lights led, at a minimum, to a 36 percent reduction in nighttime outdoor index crimes.
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Reconciling financial and social performance through heterogeneous business models: an empirical study of impact-oriented investors
    (2017) SERGIO GIOVANETTI LAZZARINI; SANDRO CABRAL; Pongeluppe, Leandro Simões; Ferreira, Luciana Carvalho de Mesquita; Rotondaro, Angélica
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    A macro-financial analysis of the corporate bond market
    (2018) Dewachter, Hans; Iania, Leonardo; Lemke, Wolfgang; Lyrio, Marco Túlio Pereira
    We assess the contribution of economic and Önancial factors in the determination of euro area corporate bond spreads over the period 2001-2015. The proposed multi-market, no arbitrage a¢ ne term structure model is based on the methodology proposed by Dewachter, Iania, Lyrio, and Perea (2015). We model jointly the ërisk-free curveí, measured by overnight index swap (OIS) rates, and the corporate yield curves for two rating classes (A and BBB). The model includes four spanned and six unspanned factors. We Önd that, in general, both economic (real activity and ináation) and Önancial factors (proxying risk aversion, áight to liquidity and general Önancial market stress) play a signiÖcant role in the determination of the spanned factors and hence in the dynamics of the risk-free yield curve and corporate bond spreads. Across the risk-free OIS curve, macroeconomic and Önancial factors are each responsible on average for explaining 30 and 65 percent of yield varation, respectively. For A and BBB-rated corporate debt, the selected Önancial variables explain on average 50 percent of the variation in corporate spreads during the last decade.
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Políticas públicas para a redução do abandono e evasão escolar de jovens
    (2017) RICARDO PAES DE BARROS; Amiris, Paula; Garcia, Beatriz; Saores, Camila; Coutinho, Diana; Gall, G.; Machado, Laura Muller
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Short-selling restrictions and returns: a natural experiment
    (2017) MARCO ANTONIO CESAR BONOMO; JOÃO MANOEL PINHO DE MELLO; Mota, Lira
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Loan fee dispersion and the cross-section of returns
    (2017) Barbosa, Fernando; MARCO ANTONIO CESAR BONOMO; Mota, Lira
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Entrepreneurial governance in private equity investments: an emerging market perspective
    (2018) GUILHERME FOWLER DE AVILA MONTEIRO; ANDREA MARIA ACCIOLY FONSECA MINARDI
  • Imagem de Miniatura
    Working Paper
    Let the users be the filter? Crowdsourced filtering to avoid online intermediary liability
    (2017) IVAR ALBERTO GLASHERSTER MARTINS LANGE HARTMANN