Recent talks and presentations

Discrimination, Political Orientation and the Probability to Emigrate and Escape: University Professors in Fascist Italy

October 15, 2025

Seminar (by Sascha), Durham University - Business School Seminars, Durham, UK

With Sascha O. Becker we study the decision to emigrate of academics of Jewish origin dismissed from their positions by the Mussolini government in 1938, when new Racial Laws were introduced, opening a new phase of increased persecution of Jews by restricting their rights and livelihoods. We use rich individual-level data, from the 1938 census on public employees, on the universe of Jewish full professors, revealing their family structure, domestic and international academic recognition, and political orientation. Jewish academics with children, with Jewish spouses, those whose parents are deceased, as well as young, internationally recognised scholars, and the ones that converted to Catholicism are more likely to emigrate. Jewish academics who are either openly fascist or anti-fascist are less likely to emigrate. We interpret the latter result along the lines of Albert O. Hischmann’s Exit, Voice and Loyalty paradigm together with the influence of relational capital on the probability to emigrate: the exertion of Voice though the public expression of political opinions (e.g. signing politically oriented Manifestos in the 1920s), indicates a higher sense attachment to local high education institutions and to the social role of university professors. This form of loyalty (to local institutions or to past self) imply a higher cost of Exit and reduces the probability of emigration. At the same time, political activism imply the formation of relational capital which is inherently local, in comparison with the social connections established by apolitical scholars that invest only in pure academic relational capital, which is more footloose. The characteristics of the social networks of the University professors under scrutiny is, therefore, negatively influencing the probability to emigrate of the politically active ones.

‘Never Again’ in the Digital Age: Mapping Online Narratives on Jews and Hate Speech through Network Analysis

September 23, 2025

Seminar, 11th International Conference on Social Science Methodology, Naples, Italy

With Giuseppe Giordano and Maria Prosperina Vitale we show that speeches around Holocaust Remembrance Day have a recurring pattern, punctuated by institutional moments like the “Remembrance Day”. Hate speeches are traditionally linked to the memory of the events and the Jews’ historical persecution. Recent events in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have given rise to new semantic domains, some of which emerge as forms of hatred reversed and spilled over from Israel to Jews.

Immigrant Workers, Entrepreneurs, Firm Exports (and Beyond): Evidence from Italy

September 13, 2025

Seminar, ETSG 26th International Conference, Milan, Italy

With Massimiliano Bratti, Gianluca Santoni, Patrizia Cella, Marinella Pepe and Francesca Alonzi we examine the impact of immigrant workers and entrepreneurs on exports between 2014 and 2017 using administrative employer-employee data linked with customs data on the population of manufacturing firms in Italy. Focusing on firm-level data enables us to explore the scale at which pro-trade effects manifest, whether firm or local. Our analysis demonstrates that both the stock of immigrants working in a firm and foreign entrepreneurs raise a firm’s export to their countries of origin, with the latter having a larger effect. On the other hand, local immigrant workers and immigrant entrepreneurs do not appear to have sizeable spillover effects on firms’ exports. Interestingly, the pro-trade effect of foreign entrepreneurs extends not only to their countries of origin, but also to the average export destination. Some preliminary results suggest that improved worker productivity in immigrant-owned enterprises may explain some of this increased competitiveness.

US trade policy and the new wave of de-Globalization

July 24, 2025

Seminar, 2025 SIEPI Summer School, Bertinoro, Italy

This is a 50 minutes talk on tariffs, US trade policy, POTUS, TACO and Tt2.0 and its motivation and consequences (Uncertainty; Financial markets; The dollar and long terms US government bonds; The Grievance doctrine and the US Current Account; CA = S - I; Productivity; Openness) and on what is coming next (What trade economists have to say?; Best strategies; Multi-level games and Geoeconomics; Rules of law; The end of multilateralism? de-Globalization?).