Battista Severgnini
Associate Professor
Om
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?
Publications
See all publicationsjanuar 2025
The Life-cycle and Opportunities of Migrants and Natives in the Danish Experience
Giacomo De Giorgi
Mauricio Prado, Associate Professor
Battista Severgnini, Associate Professor