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Bat­tista Severgn­ini

Associate Professor

Emner
Makroøkonomi Økonomi Økonomisk system Historie

I study long-run eco­nom­ic growth and pro­ductiv­ity through em­pir­ic­al and his­tor­ic­al ana­lys­is.

I study long-run economic growth and productivity through empirical and historical analysis. 

As an applied economist, I have tackled a wide range of unique research questions. For example, among my publications, I covered the following questions: 
* Can high-technological machines, such as public mechanical clocks, explain part of the long-run urban economic growth and other social aspects, like religious beliefs, in European cities?

*Can historical individual data from 18th-century Danish serfdom help us understand the imperfections in today’s labor market? 

*Can rebellions and civil wars be explained by extreme historical negative shocks that affected previous generations of fighters?  

*Can career concerns drive corruption, and can football data provide insights into this?  

*What are the income trajectories of migrants from various countries across three generations in Denmark, compared to native Danes?  

*Can the low concentration of managers in establishments help explain the missing productivity convergence between East and West Germany? 

november 2025

Colors of Growth

Lars Boerner

Tim Reinicke

Samad Sarferaz

Bat­ti­s­ta Se­verg­ni­ni, Associate Professor

Go to publication

25. marts 2025

Did the Great Irish Famine Spark a Revolution?

Go to publication

januar 2025

The Life-cycle and Opportunities of Migrants and Natives in the Danish Experience

Go to publication

Recent research projects

Eco­nom­ic Growth

I study when and why eco­nom­ic growth emerges, with a par­tic­u­lar fo­cus on the role of tech­no­lo­gies.

Pro­ductiv­ity

I study dif­fer­ent meth­od­o­lo­gies for meas­ur­ing pro­ductiv­ity, aim­ing to min­ize meas­ure­ment er­rors.

In­tergen­er­a­tion­al trans­mis­sion

Us­ing his­tor­ic­al and mod­ern data, I study how shocks are trans­mit­ted across gen­er­a­tions.