Grilagem e desmatamento na Amazônia Brasileira: uma análise Geoespacial com Base no Cadastro Ambiental Rural
30/06/2024
Rogério Reis de Mello Filho.
Orientador: João Farina Leal Mourão. Juliano Assunção.
Aqui você encontra as teses e dissertações defendidas, textos para discussão e produção acadêmica e de opinião de professores e alunos do Departamento de Economia.
A pesquisa pode ser feita por tipo de publicação, autor, título e período ou pela combinação deles. Os textos para discussão também podem ser pesquisados por número.
As monografias de Conclusão de Curso podem ser obtidas em http://www.maxwell.lambda.ele.puc-rio.br/.
30/06/2024
Rogério Reis de Mello Filho.
Orientador: João Farina Leal Mourão. Juliano Assunção.
30/06/2024
João Pedro van Erven.
Orientador: Márcio Gold Firmo.
30/06/2024
Gabriel Rodrigues Bubman Alves de Almeida.
Orientador: Maria Cláudia Gomes Pereira Sarmiento Gutierrez.
30/06/2024
Gabriel Pereira Carris Cardoso.
Orientador: Márcio Garcia.
30/06/2024
Diogo Pereira Batista.
Orientador: Tomás Guanziroli.
30/06/2024
Caio Lobianco Mansur.
Orientador: Beatriu Canto Sancho.
30/06/2024
Rafael Lopes Gabbay.
Orientador: Marco Antonio Cavalcanti.
30/06/2024
Rafael Assed de Carvalho.
Orientador: André Senna Duarte.
30/06/2024
Michelle Silva de Souza.
Orientador: Eliane Gottlieb.
30/06/2024
Maria Victoria Maia Braga de Mesquita.
Orientador: Maria Cláudia Gomes Pereira Sarmiento Gutierrez.
30/06/2024
Manoela Pinheiro Rodrigues.
Orientador: Gustavo Gonzaga.
30/06/2024
Hugo Erthal Leonardo Lopes.
Orientador: Márcio Garcia. Raphael de Oliveira Vasconcelos.
30/06/2024
Andreas Di Giulio Pfeifer.
Orientador: Stefan Alexander.
30/06/2024
Ana Beatriz Sertã Paixão da Silveira Pinto.
Orientador: Roberto Geraldo Simonard Santos Filho.
Journal of Economic Growth, v. 29,
p. 1-40, 2024
During the medieval and early modern periods the Middle East lost its economic advantage relative to the West. Recent explanations of this historical phenomenon—called the Long Divergence—focus on these regions’ distinct political economy choices regarding religious legitimacy and limited governance. We study these features in a political economy model of the interactions between rulers, secular and clerical elites, and civil society. The model induces a joint evolution of culture and political institutions converging to one of two distinct stationary states: a religious and a secular regime. We then map qualitatively parameters and initial conditions characterizing the West and the Middle East into the implied model dynamics to show that they are consistent with the Long Divergence as well as with several key stylized political and economic facts. Most notably, this mapping suggests non-monotonic political economy dynamics in both regions, in terms of legitimacy and limited governance, which indeed characterize their history.
Alberto Bisin, Jared Rubin, Avner Seror, Thierry Verdier.
O Globo e O Estado de S.Paulo, 21/06/2024
Rogério Werneck.
Journal of International Money and Finance, v. 146, 2024
Small open economies are known to be impacted by shocks to larger economies. This phenomenon is known as macroeconomic vulnerability. We propose and implement a novel index of macroeconomic vulnerability to foreign shocks for a given pair of a large economy and a small open economy. It uses a structural time-varying Bayesian VAR with a block-exogeneity hypothesis. The index is based on the sum of the responses of the small open economy to shocks in the large economy over time, thus allowing us to disentangle and measure the source of the shock, the impact variables, and the duration of impact. We highlight two results out of the many that our index unveils. First, we do not find a difference between the international impact of U.S. shocks during periods of crises versus stability. Second, we find that there is a growing decouple between emerging markets (EM) and developed markets (DM) on how their domestic inflation is affected by U.S. output shocks. Our approach can also be used to elucidate previously unknown transmission channels or unmeasured theoretical mechanisms. Finally, using a sample of developed and developing countries, we find that global banks do not increase the macroeconomic vulnerability of a country.
João Pedro Cavaleiro dos Reis Velloso, Márcio Garcia, Diogo Abry Guillén, Bernardo Silva de Carvalho Ribeiro.