Professor Catherine van der List, PhD

Current Position

since 9/24

Junior Research Affiliate

Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH) – Member of the Leibniz Association

since 9/23

Assistant Professor

University of Essex

Research Interests

  • labour markets
  • place-based policies

Catherine van der List joined the institute as a Junior Research Affiliate in September 2024. Her research focuses on labour, urban, and public economics.

Catherine van der List is a lecturer at University of Essex. She holds a PhD from University of British Columbia.

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Professor Catherine van der List, PhD
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Working Papers

Declining Free Lunch: State Capacity and Foregone Public Spending

Sarah Fritz Lorenzo Incoronato Catherine van der List

in: RFBerlin Discussion Paper, No. 67, 2025

Abstract

<p>This paper documents substantial fiscal waste in the context of one the world’s largest regional development programs – the EU Cohesion Policy. We study Italy, and find that 20% of funding commitments are never paid out and funneled into unfinished or never-started projects. In our setting, this happens for reasons unrelated to fiscal constraints – municipalities appear to simply leave money on the table. Foregone spending is more prevalent in Southern regions, but there is also stark variation across municipalities within regions. We show that such under-utilization of available funds is strongly associated with limited administrative capacity of local governments.</p>

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Reshaping the Economy? Local Reallocation Effects of Place-Based Policies

Sarah Fritz Catherine van der List

in: CESifo, No. 12031, July 2025

Abstract

<p>We study the effects of place-based policies on aggregate productivity using administrative data on projects co-financed by the EU in Italy linked to balance sheet data. We exploit quasi-experimental variation in funding for a large place-based policy stemming from measurement error in regional GDP estimates. Results show that the policy likely decreases productivity. Decompositions reveal that aggregate declines are driven by reallocation of labor to low-productivity firms. Mechanism analysis using firm-level event studies reveals that negative reallocation effects are caused by high-productivity firms taking up the funds and subsequently becoming more liquidity constrained, leading to slowdowns in employment growth.</p>

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