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JANUARY 3, 2023
What do the Sahara Desert and Paris’ 16th arrondissement have in common? Both are located above a somewhat unusual water table: when you dig a hole in it, the water gushes out all on its own! The economists Hubert Stahn and Agnes Tomini examine this astonishing geological phenomenon in which the number of open wells does not impact the quantity of water in the water table, but rather the pressure that compresses its volume.
Read the article on
https://www.dialogueseconomiques.fr/en/article/are-artesian-aquifers-endless-source-water

Latest publications

When France’s Légion d’honneur awards move stock prices: A market signal of political access
Two articles by Stéphane Benveniste (University of Paris 1, CES, AMSE) and Marc Sangnier (Aix-Marseille University, AMSE) published in VoxEU (CEPR) and The Conversation.
The 'Dialogues économiques' magazine No. 6 is online
This issue compiles the 'Dialogues économiques' articles published in 2025.
"Us" Against "Them": Ethnicity in Conflict
Whilst war fractures societies, it can bring about reinforced bonds within the communities it targets. By analysing ethnic conflicts across 36 African countries between 2002 and 2015, economist Matteo Sestito offers an original perspective on the mechanisms that forge identities and strengthen cohesion within the communities it strikes.