BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//AMSE//Event Calendar//FR
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:event-10373@www.amse-aixmarseille.fr
DTSTAMP:20260421T210925Z
CREATED:20260421T210925Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260421T210925Z
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:phd seminar - Ernesto Ugolini*\, Mariya Sakharova**
DTSTART:20231204T140000Z
DTEND:20231204T153000Z
DESCRIPTION:*Empirical research demonstrates that labor markets exposed to 
 trade globalization witness lower employment and wages\, an increase in pro
 tectionist parties' vote-share in EU\, and a proclivity for protectionist v
 oting on trade bills in the U.S. However\, the relationship between trade i
 ntegration and protectionism is nuanced. While redistribution policies can 
 offset trade-related losses\, the extent to which governments fairly distri
 bute gains across groups shapes the outcome. This article argues that trade
  globalization amplifies demand for protection only in countries with low l
 evels of intergroup redistribution. Notably\, nations with fair redistribut
 ion policies do not experience a comparable backlash against trade globaliz
 ation. To substantiate this argument\, I present a formal theoretical model
  linking tax rates\, political power\, and protectionist demands. Empirical
  evidence supports the model's predictions\, shedding light on the nuanced 
 relationship between trade\, politics\, and redistribution.**Engerman and S
 okoloﬀ conclude the North and South in the New World diverge because fa
 ctor endowments had “profound and enduring impacts...on institutional and
  economic development” (Engerman and Sokoloﬀ 1994). My research turns 
 to a diﬀerent part of the globe - Tsarist Russia - to identify more preci
 sely which mechanisms allow factor endowments to interact with institutions
  in order to produce or reduce economic growth. Using the context of Late T
 sarist agriculture I ask: what is the relationship between resources\, inst
 itutions and economic growth? My paper studies how in regions with fertile 
 soil peasants received unfavorable land allocations after the serf emancipa
 tion in 1861\, influencing development. Using data I digitized from the Lan
 d Survey of 1905 and peasant statistics from the late 19th and early 20th c
 entury\, I explore how soil quality impacted the allocation of useful land\
 , household production and literacy rates.\\n\\nContact: Lucie Giorgi : luc
 ie.giorgi[at]univ-amu.frRicardo Guzman : ricardo.guzman[at]univ-amu.frNatal
 ia Labrador : natalia.labrador-bernate[at]univ-amu.frNathan Vieira : natha
 n.vieira[at]univ-amu.fr\n\nPlus d'informations: https://www.amse-aixmarseil
 le.fr/fr/evenements/ernesto-ugolini-mariya-sakharova
LOCATION:Îlot Bernard du Bois - Amphithéâtre\, AMU - AMSE\, 5-9 boulevar
 d Maurice Bourdet\, 13001 Marseille
URL;VALUE=URI:https://www.amse-aixmarseille.fr/fr/evenements/ernesto-ugolini-mariya-sakharova
CONTACT:Lucie Giorgi : lucie.giorgi[at]univ-amu.frRicardo Guzman : ricardo.
 guzman[at]univ-amu.frNatalia Labrador :&nbsp\;natalia.labrador-bernate[at]u
 niv-amu.frNathan Vieira : nathan.vieira[at]univ-amu.fr
TRANSP:OPAQUE
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
