Details about Piero Montebruno
Access statistics for papers by Piero Montebruno.
Last updated 2023-04-15. Update your information in the RePEc Author Service.
Short-id: pmo1109
Jump to Journal Articles
Working Papers
2022
- (IN)convenient stores? What do policies pushing stores to town centres actually do?
Working Papers, Institut d'Economia de Barcelona (IEB) 
Also in CEP Discussion Papers, Centre for Economic Performance, LSE (2022)  LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library (2022)
- Business entry and exit: career changes of proprietors in England and Wales (1851-81) using record-linkage
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library
- Changes in Victorian entrepreneurship in England and Wales 1851-1911: methodology and business population estimates
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library View citations (1)
See also Journal Article in Business History (2022)
2021
- Entrepreneurship in Scotland, 1851–1911
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library View citations (1)
- Judge Dread: court severity, repossession risk and demand in mortgage and housing markets
CEP Discussion Papers, Centre for Economic Performance, LSE 
Also in LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library (2021)  LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library (2021)
- The square root of negative one: the influence of imaginary numbers on Nicanor Parra’s poem ‘El hombre imaginario’
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library
2020
- Covid-19 school shutdowns: what will they do to our children's education?
CEP Covid-19 Analyses, Centre for Economic Performance, LSE View citations (23)
- Disrupted schooling: impacts on achievement from the Chilean school occupations
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library 
Also in CEP Discussion Papers, Centre for Economic Performance, LSE (2020) View citations (1)
- Households and entrepreneurship in England and Wales, 1851-1911
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany View citations (1)
Also in LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library (2020) View citations (1)
- The population of non-corporate business proprietors in England and Wales 1891–1911
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library View citations (2)
See also Journal Article in Business History (2020)
2019
- Entrepreneurial discrete choice: Modelling decisions between self-employment, employer and worker status. Working paper 15
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany View citations (1)
- Female entrepreneurship: business, marriage and motherhood in England and Wales, 1851–1911
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany View citations (1)
Also in LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library (2019)
- Incidence of surrogacy in the USA and Israel and implications on women’s health: a quantitative comparison
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany
- Machine learning classification of entrepreneurs in British historical census data
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany View citations (5)
- Reconstructing business proprietor responses for censuses 1851-81: a tailored logit cut-off method. Working paper 9.2
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany View citations (1)
- Shifts in agrarian entrepreneurship in mid-Victorian England and Wales
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library View citations (6)
2018
- Adjustment Weights 1891-1911: Weights to adjust entrepreneur numbers for non-response and misallocation bias in Censuses 1891-1911. Working paper 11
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany View citations (1)
- Reconstructing entrepreneur and business numbers for censuses 1851-81. Working paper 9
MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich, Germany View citations (3)
- Take me to the centre of your town! Using micro-geographical data to identify town centres
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library View citations (4)
See also Journal Article in CESifo Economic Studies (2018)
2017
- Using Micro-Geography Data to Identify Town-Centre Space in Great Britain
SERC Discussion Papers, Centre for Economic Performance, LSE 
Also in LSE Research Online Documents on Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library (2017) 
See also Journal Article in CESifo Economic Studies (2018)
Journal Articles
2022
- Changes in Victorian entrepreneurship in England and Wales 1851-1911: Methodology and business population estimates
Business History, 2022, 64, (7), 1211-1243 
See also Working Paper (2022)
- Profitability of small- and medium-sized enterprises in Marshall’s time: sector and spatial heterogeneity in the nineteenth century
(The use of information about occupations)
Cambridge Journal of Economics, 2022, 46, (1), 219-249
2020
- The Population of Non-corporate Business Proprietors in England and Wales 1891–1911
Business History, 2020, 62, (8), 1341-1372 View citations (3)
See also Working Paper (2020)
2019
- A tale of two tails: Do Power Law and Lognormal models fit firm-size distributions in the mid-Victorian era?
Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 2019, 523, (C), 858-875 View citations (5)
2018
- Take Me to the Centre of Your Town! Using Micro-geographical Data to Identify Town Centres
CESifo Economic Studies, 2018, 64, (2), 255-291 View citations (4)
See also Working Paper (2018) Working Paper (2017)
2017
- Life in a slum: understanding living conditions in Nairobi’s slums across time and space
Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 2017, 33, (3), 496-520 View citations (14)
|
The links between different versions of a paper are constructed automatically by matching on the titles.
Please contact if a link is incorrect.
Use this form
to add links between versions where the titles do not match.
|