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Successful thesis defense for Iacopo Bianchi

His thesis explores how structural, informational, and historical forces shape development outcomes in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Iacopo Bianchi at his defense.

Iacopo Bianchi at his defense.

On Thursday 23 October IIES graduate student, Iacopo Bianchi, successfully defended his doctoral thesis, "Productivity, Career Choice, and Colonial Legacies: Essays in Development Economics".

In the thesis, Iacopo explores how structural, informational, and historical forces shape development outcomes in Sub-Saharan Africa. Through field experiments and surveys, he finds that gendered productivity gaps in Ugandan agriculture stem from subtle social frictions rather than wage differences; digital finance boosts women’s business potential only when paired with training; young Ugandans’ career choices are driven more by family approval and social norms than by wages; and colonial legacies influence attitudes toward homosexuality in complex, context-specific ways. Together, his studies show that development depends not on single factors but on the interplay of skills, norms, information, and history.

Vincent Somville, NHH - Norwegian School of Economics, kindly acted as opponent.

Iacopo will next join the World Bank.

Read more about Iacopo's thesis.

Last updated: 2025-10-24

Source: Institute for International Economic Studies (IIES)