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Oriana Bandiera

Researcher at London School of Economics and Political Science

Publications -  152
Citations -  9764

Oriana Bandiera is an academic researcher from London School of Economics and Political Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Incentive & Productivity. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 143 publications receiving 8614 citations. Previous affiliations of Oriana Bandiera include Center for Economic and Policy Research & Institute for the Study of Labor.

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Social Networks and Technology Adoption in Northern Mozambique

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse whether and how individual adoption decisions depend upon the choices of others in the same social networks. And they show that the relationship between the probability of adoption and the number of known adopters is shaped as an inverse-U.
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Social Networks and Technology Adoption in Northern Mozambique

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse whether and how individual adoption decisions depend upon the choices of others in the same social networks. And they present empirical evidence that the relationship between the probability of adoption and the number of known adopters is shaped as an inverse-U.
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Social Preferences and the Response to Incentives: Evidence from Personnel Data

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present evidence on whether workers have social preferences by comparing workers' productivity under relative incentives, where individual effort imposes a negative externality on others, with their productivity under piece rates where it does not.
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Social Incentives in the Workplace

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present evidence on social incentives in the workplace, namely on whether workers' behavior is affected by the presence of those they are socially tied to, even in settings where there are no externalities among workers due to either the production technology or the compensation scheme in place.
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Does Financial Reform Raise or Reduce Saving

TL;DR: The effect of financial liberalization on private saving is theoretically ambiguous, not only because the link between interest rate levels and saving is itself ambiguous, but also because financial liberalisation is a multidimensional and phased process, sometimes involving reversals as discussed by the authors.