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Pietro Biroli

Union Bank of Switzerland

ORCID: 0000-0002-5033-4688

Publishes on Cognitive Abilities and Testing, Genetic Associations and Epidemiology, Birth, Development, and Health. 100 papers and 2.3k citations.

100Publications
2.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Maternal Depression, Women’s Empowerment, and Parental Investment: Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial
Victoria Baranov, Sonia Bhalotra, Pietro Biroli et al.|American Economic Review|2020
Cited by 195Open Access

We evaluate the medium-term impacts of treating maternal depression on women’s mental health, financial empowerment, and parenting decisions. We leverage variation induced by a cluster-randomized controlled trial that provided psychotherapy to 903 prenatally depressed mothers in rural Pakistan. It was one of the world’s largest psych otherapy interventions, and it dramatically reduced postpartum depression. Seven years after psychotherapy concluded, we returned to the study site to find that impacts on women’s mental health had persisted, with a 17 percent reduction in depression rates. The intervention also improved women’s financial empowerment and increased both time- and money-intensive parental investments by between 0.2 and 0.3 standard deviations. (JEL G51, I12, J16, O15)

Family Life in Lockdown
Pietro Biroli, Steven Bosworth, Della Giusta Marina et al.|Archivio istituzionale della ricerca (Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna)|2021
Cited by 110Open Access

The lockdown imposed following the COVID-19 pandemic of spring 2020 dramatically changed the daily lives and routines of millions of people worldwide. We analyze how such changes contributed to patterns of activity within the household using a novel survey of Italian, British, and American families in lockdown. A high percentage report disruptions in the patterns of family life, manifesting in new work patterns, chore allocations, and household tensions. Though men have taken an increased share of childcare and grocery shopping duties, reallocations are not nearly as stark as disruptions to work patterns might suggest, and families having to reallocate duties report greater tensions. Our results highlight tightened constraints budging up against stable and gendered patterns of intra-household cooperation norms. While the long-run consequences of the COVID-19 lockdown on family life cannot be assessed at this stage, we point toward the likely opportunities and challenges.