GIANMARCO DANIELE
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Doing Business Below the Line: Screening, Mafias and Public Funds, with G. Dipoppa

8/23/2019

 
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Repressive policies to fight against criminal organizations are often met with a violent response from criminal groups. What happens when the state adopts a non-repressive strategy?

We evaluate a policy aimed at fighting criminal organizations by targeting their revenues.

Since 2013, Italian companies applying for more than 150,000 Euros in public funds undergo a police screening to determine if they have connections to mafias. We exploit this time-varying discontinuity to identify firms self-selecting below the threshold after the law was approved.

We observe a large jump in subsidies for values just below the cutoff which cannot be attributed to avoiding bureaucratic costs or investigations for other crimes. Firms sorting are concentrated in mafia affected cities, display worse performances, operate in typical mafia-affected sectors and have balance sheet indicators of money laundering.

These firms receive 3.8% of all subsidies assigned in our sample. Our findings shed light on the extent to which mafia-connected firms misappropriate public funds and on the effectiveness of screening policies which apply discontinuously when criminal groups behave strategically.

Last version

This paper was presented at:
  • Bank of Italy UIF – Bocconi Workshop “Quantitative methods and the fight against economic crime 2019” (Milan, IT, 2019); 10th Transatlantic Workshop on the Economics of Crime (Paris, FR); European Association of Law and Economics (Milan, IT)
  • Harvard Economics, Political Economy and Culture workshop 2018 (US); Harvard Political Science, Political Economy workshop, 2018 (US); Northeastern Political Science Association, Montreal 2019 (CAN); Midwestern Political Science Association, Chicago 2019 (US); Society for Institutional and Organizational Economics, Stockholm 2019 (SE); Apsa 2019, Washington (US)
  • 2019: Collegio Carlo Alberto (IT); Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (ES); ETH Zurich (CH); Bocconi University (IT) ; 2018: University of Lausanne (CH); University of Mannheim (DE) 

Abandon Ship? Party Brands and Politicians’ Responses to a Political Scandal, with B. Geys and S. Galletta, Journal of Public Economics 2020

8/23/2019

 
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https://www.flickr.com/photos/jihel/15559035577/
How do politicians react to a political earthquake?

In this article, we study politicians’ responses to the main political scandal in Italian recent history (“Clean Hands”), and overcome endogeneity concerns by analysing the local implications of this national corruption scandal.

We find that local politicians withdraw support for incumbents in parties hit by Clean Hands – inducing early government terminations in such municipalities.

Politicians in parties hit by the scandal exhibit higher rates of party switching and lower re-running rates. By decreasing the value of the party “brand”, scandals thus become transmitted across politicians and levels of government via partisan cues.

Moreover, in the long term,  municipalities hit by the scandal have lower corruption and voter turnout.


Last Version

This paper was presented at:
  • 2017-2018: University of Warwick (UK); London School of Economics (UK); Universitat Pompeu Fabra (ES)Institut d'Economia de Barcelona IEB (ES); IMT Lucca (IT); University of Fribourg (DE); EU Commission Joint Research Centre Ispra (IT)
  • European Association of Law and Economics (Milan, IT); European Political Science Association (Wien, AU)
  • Conference "Corruption, Tax Evasion and Institutions" (Riga, LV, 2017): Video Coverage
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