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This study presents unique empirical evidence on the importance of moral support for performance. We take advantage of an unusual change in Argentinean football legislation. In August 2013, as a matter of National security, the Argentinean government forced all teams in the first division to play their games with only home team supporters. Supporters of visiting teams were not allowed to be in stadiums during league games. We estimate the effect of this exogenous variation of supporters on team performance, and find that visiting teams are, on average, about 20% more likely to lose without the presence of their supporters. As a counterfactual experiment, we run the analysis using contemporaneous cup games, where the visiting team supporters were allowed to attend, and find no effect of the ban on those games. Moreover, the ban does not seem to bias the decisions of referees, the lineups or the market value of the teams, suggesting that the effect on team performance is due to the loss of moral support rather than other factors. Finally, we find that moral support is more relevant when there is equal power between the two teams, suggesting that moral support compensates the power of monetary resources. This paper provides a proof of concept of moral support as an important non-monetary resource, even in settings with high monetary incentives.

Centre for Research & Analysis of Migration
Department of Economics, University College London
Drayton House, 30 Gordon St, London WC1H 0AX, UK
f.colella@ucl.ac.uk

Istituto di Economia Politica
Università della Svizzera italiana
Via G. Buffi 13, 6900 Lugano, Switzerland
fabrizio.colella@usi.ch

References
David Card - Rafael Lalive - Mathias Thoenig - Christian Dustmann

Labor Economics and Policy
USI Lugano - MSc in Economics - Spring
HEC Lausanne - MSc in Economics - Fall 2020, 2021

Econometrics
USI Lugano - MSc in Economics - Fall

Teaching Assistant
- Econometrics, HEC Lausanne - MSc in Economics - Fall 2017/18/19
- International Trade, HEC Lausanne - BSc in Economics - Spring 2017/18/20/21
- Environmental Economics, HEC Lausanne - MSc in Economics - Spring 2017

We present acreg, a new command that implements the arbitrary clustering correction of standard errors proposed in Colella et al. (2019, IZA discussion paper 12584). Arbitrary here refers to the way observational units are correlated with each other, we impose no restrictions so that our approach can be used with a wide range of data. The command accommodates both cross-sectional and panel databases and allows the estimation of ordinary least-squares and twostage least-squares coefficients, correcting standard errors in three environments: in a spatial setting using units’ coordinates or distance between units, in a network setting starting from the adjacency matrix, and in a multiway clustering framework taking multiple clustering variables as input. Distance and time cutoffs can be specified by the user, and linear decays in time and space are also optional.

Awards: E4S Grant “transition toward a more resilient, sustainable and inclusive economy”

The effects of robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) on the job market are matters of great social concern. Economists and technology experts are debating at what rate, and to what extent, technology could be used to replace humans in occupations, and what actions could mitigate the unemployment that would result. To this end, it is important to predict which jobs could be automated in the future and what workers could do to move to occupations at lower risk of automation. Here, we calculate the automation risk of almost 1000 existing occupations by quantitatively assessing to what extent robotics and AI abilities can replace human abilities required for those jobs. Furthermore, we introduce a method to find, for any occupation, alternatives that maximize the reduction in automation risk while minimizing the retraining effort. We apply the method to the U.S. workforce composition and show that it could substantially reduce the workers’ automation risk, while the associated retraining effort would be moderate. Governments could use the proposed method to evaluate the unemployment risk of their populations and to adjust educational policies. Robotics companies could use it as a tool to better understand market needs, and members of the public could use it to identify the easiest route to reposition themselves on the job market.

With Rafael Lalive, Dario Floreano, Isabelle Chappuis, Antonio Paolillo, and Nicola Nosengo