Journée Doctorale du programme Politiques publiques
Programme de la journée du 18 juin
14h-16h30 : Présentation des doctorants
14h-14h35 : Ignacio Leon Nina, "Congestion in a Higher Education Reform in Ecuador: Transitioning from a Decentralized to a Centralized Application Processes" (en collaboration avec Carla Canelas)
14h35-15h10 : Vincent Jardine, "Identité des maires et concurrence dans la commande publique municipale en France (2015-2023)" (en collaboration avec Adrien Deschamps, doctorant à l'université d'Avignon)
PAUSE
15h30-16H05 : Iona Astier. "Bridging Divides: Political Polarization and the Evolution of Women's Rights in OECD countries" (en collaboration avec François Facchini)
16h05-16h40 : Gabriel Tailleur. Institutional Trust and Money : Exploring the Dialectic of Public and Private Currencies in the European Parliament with Textual Analysis
PAUSE
17H-18H15
Invités (e) d’honneur. Nathalie Bulle (dir. CNRS) & Pr. Renaud Fillieule (U. Lilles)
L’actualité de l’individualisme méthodologique
18h30
Apéritif dinatoire sur la terrasse du 6° MSE
Prochains rendez-vous
Le séminaire S2P propose environ deux fois par mois de septembre à juin une discussion sur un ouvrage ou un article traitant des problèmes posés par les politiques publiques. Il se propose de continuer dans cette voie tout en continuant son travail de veille scientifique sur les grands débats de finances publique.
Mardi 24 septembre 2024 17h-19h Salle 6
Pay and unemployment determinants of migration flows in the European Union
António Afonso, José Alves* (ISEG – School of Economics and Management University of Lisbon Portugal) & Krzysztof Beck
We analyze the migration drivers within the European Union countries. For a set of 23 EU countries over the 1995-2019 period, we use Bayesian Model Averaging and quantile regression to assess notably the relevance of unemployment and earnings. We find that the existence of a common border increases the number of net migrants by 172 people per 1000 inhabitants. In addition, 1000 PPP Euro increase in the difference in net annual salaries increases net migration by approximately 50 and 42 people per 1000 inhabitants in a working age of both countries under uniform and binomial-beta model prior, respectively. Moreover, one percentage point increase in the difference in the unemployment rate is associated with an increase in net immigration by approximately 6 and 3 persons by 1000 inhabitants in both countries. These results are also corroborated with the quantile regression results. Hence, human capital inside the EU is moving in search of higher cross-country earnings.