Francisco Costa is an Assistant Professor in the Lerner College of Business and Economics at the University of Delaware and an Affiliated Researcher with the FGV EPGE Brazilian School of Economics and Finance. His main research interests are environmental economics and development economics. He received his PhD in Economics from the London School of Economics.
Recent work by Francisco Costa
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National policy reversals and deforestation in the Amazon
Evidence from the Amazon highlights the crucial role of policy continuity and political commitment to achieving sustainable conservation outcomes
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The fate of the Brazilian Amazon's carbon stock
Estimates indicate that current land-use patterns would inefficiently release 44 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from the rainforest
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Attracting physicians to underserved areas: Evidence from Brazil
Policies based on physicians' geographic preferences, such as quotas and university expansion, are more cost-effective than financial incentives
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The welfare effect of inducing persistent changes in behaviours
The welfare effect of policies aimed at changing behaviours persistently may be larger than usually measured because of 'hysteresis'