|
ALBERTO DALMAZZO Dipartimento di Economia Politica |
|
| Note Biografiche |
Nato a Biella, il 3 Giugno 1962 Educazione: Laurea in Economia Politica, Università di Siena Master of Science in Economics, London School of Economics Ph.D. in Economics, London School of Economics (titolo: “Technological and Financial Factors in Models of Wage Determination”) |
| Curriculum Accademico |
Posizione Attuale: Professore di Economica Politica Incarichi e posizioni precedenti: Research Assistant presso il Centre for Economic Performance, London School of Economics dal 1989 al 1991. Ricercatore presso il Dipartimento di Economia Politica dell’Università di Siena dal giugno 1991 all’ottobre 1998. Professore Associato di Politica Economica dal novembre 1998 al novembre 2002. Ha collaborato e collabora ai corsi di Macroeconomia presso il Dottorato di Teoria Economica e Istituzioni dell’Università “Tor Vergata”, Roma, e al Dottorato di Economia Politica dell’Università di Siena.
Referee per riviste scientifiche:
American Economic Review; European Economic Review; Scandinavian Journal of
Economics; Journal of Banking and Finance; Economica; Macroeconomic
Dynamics; Journal of Macroeconomics; Scottish Journal of Political Economy;
Journal of Economics; Empirica; Labour; Economic Notes; European Journal of
Political Economy; Contemporary Economic Policy; Bulletin of Economic
Research. |
| Pubblicazioni |
Pubblicazioni :"Outside options in a bargaining model with decay in the size of the cake", Economics Letters, 1992. "Bargaining power and wage determination: the role of outside options", Labour, 1995. "Debt and wage negotiations: a bankruptcy-based approach", Scandinavian Journal of Economics, September 1996. “Regulation of capital flows and exchange rate volatility. Preliminary results on the Italian experience”, con Andrea Berardi e Giancarlo Marini, in Institutions and Economic Organisation in Advanced Economies. The Governance Perspective (M.Baldassarri, L.Paganetto and E.Phelps editors), Macmillan, London, 1998. ”Liquidation risks in the Rotemberg-Saloner implicit collusion model”, con Fabio Bagliano, Economics Letters, 1999. “Strategic debt with multi-task technologies”, Canadian Journal of Economics, February 2000. “Liquidity, trading size and the coexistence of dealership and auction markets”, con Fabio Bagliano e Andrea Brandolini, Economic Notes, July 2000. “Bank competition and ECB’s monetary policy”, con Fabio C. Bagliano e Giancarlo Marini, Journal of Banking and Finance, 2000. “Foreign debt, sanctions and investment: a model with politically-unstable Less Developed Countries”, con Giancarlo Marini, International Journal of Finance & Economics, April 2000. “Resources and incentives to reform”, con Guido de Blasio, IMF Staff Papers, 2003. “Monetary institutions, monopolistic competition, unionized labour markets and economic performance”, con Fabrizio Coricelli and Alex Cukierman, Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 2006“Fiscal-Monetary Policy Interactions in the Presence of Unionized Labor Markets” (con Alex Cukierman), International Tax and Public Finance, 2006
“Social Returns to Education in Italian Local
Labor Markets” (con Guido de Blasio), Annals of
Regional Science, 2007 "O-ring Wage Inequality", con Tuomas Pekkarinen e Pasquale Scaramozzino, Economica, 2007. Working Papers: “Where Do Human Capital Externalities End Up?” (con Guido de Blasio), Temi di Discussione No.554, Banca D’Italia, Roma, 2005. "Social returns to education: evidence from Italian local labor market areas" con Guido de Blasio, IMF Working Paper, WP/03/165, August 2003. “It takes two to tango: process integration and wages”, con Pasquale Scaramozzino, Discussion Paper 08/00/01, CeFiMS, SOAS, University of London, 2000. “Firm’s debt and finite-horizon wage bargaining”, Discussion Paper No.54, Centre for Economic Performance, LSE, 1991. |
| Lavori On-Line |
Where Do Human Capital Externalities End Up? (con Guido de Blasio), Temi di Discussione No.554, Banca D’Italia, Roma, 2005. Social returns to education: evidence from Italian local labor market areas, con Guido de Blasio, IMF Working Paper, WP/03/165, August 2003. |
| Didattica | Corso di
Macroeconomia (M-Q) e Macroeconomia Avanzata Corso di Macroeconomia I presso il Dottorato di Economia Politica dell’Università di Siena |