20271 - PUBLIC ECONOMICS
Department of Social and Political Sciences
ALESSANDRA CASARICO
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
The course focuses on selected areas of public intervention, which are at the forefront of policy debate and academic research. We start from the observation that inequality is undermining political and economic stability and study the different angles from which public policy can tackle it. These include:
- Education and skill acquisition.
- Social security and redistribution.
- Tax systems and tax evasion.
- Gender.
- International migration and the integration of immigrants.
- Health disparities.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Recognise the main trends in public intervention in the economy.
- Identify the main justifications for goverment intervention.
- Illustrate modes of intervention in education, social security and redistributive policy.
- Describe what motivates tax evasion.
- Distinguish the various dimensions of inequality.
- Discuss the fiscal impact of immigration.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
Address policy relevant questions by:
- Identifying the institutional details which characterise a given policy.
- Framing the policy question in theoretical terms.
- Choose the appropriate data to perform empirical analysis on the impact of the policy.
- Analyse and interpret the results of the empirical analyses.
- Advocate for specific public policy interventions.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Group assignments
DETAILS
Students must form small groups. Each group is assigned a paper from a reading list to be presented or discussed in class (group presentation). The schedule for presentations and discussions, as well as the groups are decided in class, depending on attendance.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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x | x | |
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x | x |
ATTENDING STUDENTS
Two partial exams or general, plus group assignment. The exam aims at verifying that students are able to present theoretical models, to analyse and interpret the results of empirical analyses, and to discuss alterntive policy reform proposals.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Two partial exams or general. The exam aims at verifying that students are able to present theoretical models, to analyse and interpret the results of empirical analyses, and to discuss alterntive policy reform proposals.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Most of the course is based on articles from scientific journals and working papers. The compulsory readings are provided at the beginning of the course on Bboard. A set of slides and lecture notes are uploaded before class and are compulsory material. Instructors are available to share the provisional reading list with the interested students before the beginning of the course.