Skip to main content

Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin

Trinity Menu Trinity Search



Dr. Nicola Fontana
Assistant Professor, Economics

Biography

Nicola Fontana is an Assistant Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at Trinity College Dublin. He is an associate of the Centre for Economics, Policy and History, of the Trinity Impact Evaluation Unit and of Trinity Research in Social Sciences. He is also an associate at the Centre for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics. His research interests centre on Political Economy, Economic History, Labour Economics and Urban Economics. Nicola obtained his PhD in Economics in 2021 from the London School of Economics and Political Science. He holds a Master of Science in Economics and Social Science (ESS) from Bocconi University and Master in Economics: Research Focus from the Université Catholique de Louvain (Joint Degree Program). He has published in the American Economic Review: Insights and Journal of Comparative Economics and has attended many international conferences.

Publications and Further Research Outputs

Peer-Reviewed Publications

Nicola Fontana, Tommaso Nannicini, Guido Tabellini, Data for: Historical Roots of Political Extremism: The Effects of Nazi Occupation of Italy, Journal of Comparative Economics, 2023 Dataset, 2023 URL

Nicola Fontana, Tommaso Nannicini, Guido Tabellini, Historical Roots of Political Extremism: The Effects of Nazi Occupation of Italy, Journal of Comparative Economics, 51, (3), 2023, p723 - 743 Journal Article, 2023 URL DOI

Tim Besley, Nicola Fontana, Nicola Limodio, Antitrust Policies and Profitability in Non-Tradable Sectors, American Economic Review: Insights, 3, (2), 2021, p251 - 265 Journal Article, 2021 URL DOI

Tim Besley, Nicola Fontana, Nicola Limodio, Data for: Antitrust Policies and Profitability in Non-Tradable Sectors, American Economic Association, 2021 Dataset, 2021 URL DOI

Non-Peer-Reviewed Publications

Nicola Fontana, Who is my neighbour? Short-term renting and civic engagement in London, CEP Discussion Paper, 2025 Journal Article, 2025 URL

Nicola Fontana; Marco Manacorda; Gianluca Russo; Marco Tabellini, Emigration and Long-Run Economic Development: Evidence from the Italian Mass Migration, Harvard Business School Working Paper, 26, (18), 2025 Journal Article, 2025 DOI TARA - Full Text

Nicola Fontana, Italian historical dataset at municipality level, Personal dataset, 2023 Dataset, 2023 URL

Nicola Fontana, London ward characteristics, Personal dataset, 2023 Dataset, 2023 URL

Nicola Fontana, Airbnb hosts, Personal dataset, 2023 Dataset, 2023 URL

Nicola Fontana, Airbnb listings, Personal dataset, 2023 Dataset, 2023 URL

Research Expertise

Description

My research sits at the intersection of political economy and economic history. I study how institutions, conflict, migration, and local economic environments shape long-run development and contemporary political and civic outcomes. Across my work, I combine applied microeconomic methods with intensive data construction, archival work, and spatially disaggregated datasets to examine how political preferences, social interactions, and economic behaviour are formed over time. A first strand of my research focuses on the role of historical shocks and critical junctures. In this work, I study how wars, dictatorships, migration, and institutional interventions shape political beliefs, state"society relations, and long-run development. My published work on the legacy of Nazi occupation in Italy and my ongoing projects on Fascist repression, post-war aid, and the Italian mass migration all belong to this broader agenda. A second strand examines the political economy of cities and local communities, with particular attention to housing markets, neighbourhood change, and the effects of new platforms and technologies on civic engagement, social capital, and local labour markets. My solo work on short-term renting in London is part of this line of research. More broadly, I aim to build a coherent research profile under the umbrella of political economy by bringing together questions that connect institutions, historical persistence, and contemporary economic and social change. My work is characterized by the construction of original datasets and by a strong interest in combining insights from economics, political science, and economic history. This allows me to address questions that are empirically rigorous while also speaking to wider debates on democracy, conflict, urban change, and long-run development. At present, I have a strong pipeline of projects at different stages of completion, with four papers forming the core of my expected tenure package and a broader set of projects that further strengthen the medium-term sustainability of my research agenda.

Keywords

Applied Microeconomics; ECONOMIC HISTORY; ECONOMICS; Labor Economics; Political Economics/Economy; Urban Economics

Recognition

Representations

Referee for European Meetings of Econometrics Society

Referee for: American Political Science Review, Economica, Economics Letters, Explorations in Economic History, Journal of Industrial and Business Economics, Journal of Political Economy, Journal of Labor Research, Journal of Public Economics, Review of Economic Studies, Social Science History, The Quarterly Journal of Economics 2018

Awards and Honours

Supervisor for a John O'Hagan Grattan Scholarship 2023-2027

IEA Travel Grant 2023

Arts and Social Sciences Benefactions Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2023

Arts and Social Sciences Benefactions Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2022

Research Boost Program, Trinity College Dublin 2021

Start Up Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2021

Arts and Social Visiting Professor Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2023

Arts and Social Visiting Professor Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2022

LSE Research Training Support Grant 2015-2019

LSE Academic Staff Contribution Pay award 2020-2021

ESRC Doctoral Training Centre Studentship 2015-2019

Full Graduate Merit Award Scholarship, Bocconi University 2011-2012

Arts and Social Sciences Benefactions Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2024

Arts and Social Visiting Professor Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2024

Montias Prize 2022-2023 2024

EUI Research Council Fund ((joint with Andrea Ichino and Tommaso Nannicini) 2024-2026

EIEF Grant (joint with Francesco Barilari) 2025-2026

Arts and Social Visiting Professor Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2026

Arts and Social Visiting Professor Fund, Trinity College Dublin 2026

Memberships

CEPR Media Plurality Research Policy Network - Member 01/09/2022

Centre for Academic Performance - Associate 01/09/2016

Centre for Economics, Policy and History (CEPH) - Associate 15/03/2023

Trinity Impact Evaluation Unit (TIME) - Member 01/05/2022

Royal Economic Society - Member 01/09/2020

Trinity Research in Social Sciences (TRiSS) - Associate 01/08/2021