CURRICULUM VITAE

José Alberto Molina University of () and Institute of Labor Economics-IZA (Germany) ORCID: 0000-0002-9437-4606 July, 2021

PERSONAL Name: José Alberto Molina Date and place of birth: September 2, 1963. Maluenda (Zaragoza, Spain). Civil status: Married, three children. Address: Department of Economic Analysis. Faculty of Economics and Business Studies. University of Zaragoza. Gran Vía 2. 50005 Zaragoza. Spain Phone: 34 876 761818. E-mail: [email protected]. Web: http://personal.unizar.es/jamolina/ IZA (Bonn, Germany): https://www.iza.org/person/3079/jose-alberto-molina Google Scholar Citations: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=_MrPJoEAAAAJ&hl=es IDEAS.RePEc: https://ideas.repec.org/f/pmo697.html

EDUCATION 1992. Ph. D. in Economics (Honours). Title of Thesis: “Analysis of the strucutures of private consumption in the OECD: convergence and intertemporal preferences”. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 1986. B.A. in Economics (Honours). University of Zaragoza, Spain.

CURRENT POSITION May 2021-Date: Head. Research Group “Entrepreneurship and Labor Market”. Iberus Connect (Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Valle del Ebro. Campus Íberus). January 2021-Date: Director. Resarch Institute on Employment, Digital Society and Sustainability (IEDIS). University of Zaragoza. March 2017-Date: Research Fellow. Global Labor Organization https://glabor.org/wp/ December 2014-Date: Director. Chair on Entrepreneurship. University of Zaragoza-Regional Government of Aragón. Spain. http://catedraemprender.unizar.es/nosotros January 2009-Date: Professor. Department of Economic Analysis. Faculty of Economics and Business Studies. University of Zaragoza, Spain. https://dae.unizar.es/ September 2006-Date: Research Fellow. Institute of Labor Economics-IZA, Bonn, Germany. https://www.iza.org/ 2003-Date. Head. Research Group “Economics of the Population, Labour Market and Industrial Economics” S32_20R (previous name “Family and Industrial Economics”). Regional Government of , Spain.

EMPLOYMENT 2014-2021: Member of the Institute for Biocomputation and Physics of Complex Systems (BIFI). University of Zaragoza. Spain. http://www.bifi.es/es/ 2009-2011: President. Spanish Association of Deans of Economic and Business Studies, Spain 2005-2015: Dean. Faculty of Economics and Business Studies. University of Zaragoza, Spain 2003-2005. Head of the “Pirineos” Teaching and Research Center. Universidad Internacional Menéndez Pelayo, Spain 1999-2005. Vice-Dean. Faculty of Economics. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 1995-2009. Senior Lecturer. Department of Economic Analysis. Faculty of Economics. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 1987-1995. Assistant Lecturer. Department of Economic Analysis. Faculty of Economics. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 1987-1992. Assistant. Department of Economic Analysis. Faculty of Economics. University of Zaragoza, Spain.

1

VISITING 2019 (2 months). Visiting Professor. Department of Economics, Boston College, USA. 2018 (2 months). Visiting Professor. Department of Economics, Boston College, USA. 2016 (6 months). Visiting Professor. Department of Economics, Boston College, USA. 2014 (1 month). Visiting Professor. Department of Economics, National University of Ireland, Ireland. 2013 (6 months). Visiting Professor. Department of Economics, Boston College, USA. 2011 (1 month). Visiting Scholar. Department of Human Development and Family Issues, University of Rhode Island, USA. 2005 (6 months). Visiting Post-Doctoral Fellow. Department of Economics, Warwick University, UK. 2000 (6 months). Visiting Researcher. Fundación de Estudios de Economía Aplicada-FEDEA, , Spain. 1998 (1 month). Visiting Scholar, University John F. Kennedy, Argentina

TEACHING Undergraduate: Econometrics, Microeconomics (in Spanish and in English), Welfare Economics. Posgraduate: Consumer Behavior, Family and Population Economics, Microeconomics.

RESEARCH INTERESTS Microeconomics, Household and Population Economics, Labour Economics, Urban and Regional Economics, Well-Being

EDITORSHIPS 2023: Co-Editor, Encyclopedia of Consumption, Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK. 2022: Editor, Mothers in the Labor Market, Springer, New York, USA. 2021: Co-Editor, Special Issue “The Social and Economic Impact of Covid-19 on Family Functioning and Well-Being”. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, University of Minnesota, USA. 2021: Guest Editor, Special Issue “Sustainable Household Behaviors: Consumption and Mobility”, Sustainability, Institute of Technology, University of Ontario, Canada. 2020-Date: Member of the Editorial Board of Sustainability (“Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability” Section) Institute of Technology, University of Ontario, Canada. 2020: Guest Editor, Special Issue “Family and Entrepreneurship”, Journal of Family and Economic Issues, University of Minnesota, USA. 2017-Date: Member of the Board of the Society of Economics of the Household. San Diego State University, USA. 2016-2019: Editor, Child & Family Blog (https://childandfamilyblog.com/), University of Princeton, USA, University of Cambridge, UK, and Jacobs Foundation, Switzerland. 2016-Date: Editor, Munich Personal RePEc Archive (MPRA), Munich, Germany. 2015: Guest Editor, Special Issue “Caring within the Family: Reconciling Work and Family Life”, Journal of Family and Economic Issues, University of New Hamphise, USA. 2014: Guest Editor, Special Issue “Altruism and monetary transfers in the household”, Review of Economics of the Household, San Diego State University, USA. 2013: Guest Editor, Special Issue “Altruism in the household: in-kind transfers in the context of kin selection”, Review of Economics of the Household, San Diego State University, USA. 2011: Editor, Household Economics Behaviors, Springer, New York, USA. https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9781441994301 2010-Date : Associate Editor, Review of Economics of the Household, San Diego State University, USA. 2009-Date : Associate Editor, Journal of Family and Economic Issues, University of Rhode Island, USA. 2007-2009 : Member of the Editorial Board, Journal of Family and Economic Issues, University of Rhode Island, USA. 2006-Date: Associate Editor, Applied Economics, Department of Economics, Warwick University, UK. 2006-Date: Associate Editor, Applied Economics Letters, Department of Economics, Warwick University, UK. 2006: Guest Editor, Special Issue “Risky Consumption”, International Journal of Consumer Studies, Caerphilly, UK. 2002-2020 : Member of the Editorial Board, International Journal of Consumer Studies, Caerphilly, UK. 2002-2005 : Founding Editor, Working Papers in Economics. University of Zaragoza, Spain.

2

REFEREE Spanish Agency of Evaluation-ANECA (Ministry of Science and Innovation), Government Delegation for the National Plan on Drugs (Ministry of Health). Regional Agency of Evaluation of Aragón (CONAID), BBVA Foundation, Ibercaja Foundation, Social Obsevatory “la Caixa, International Labour Office (ILO), Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Reseach (NOW), Austrian Science Fund (FWF).

Journals: Agricultural Economics, Agricultural Economics Review, American Journal of Public Health, Applied Economics, Appied Energy, Business Ethics: A European Review, Children and Youth Services Review, Demographic Research, Economic Change and Restructuring, Economic Modelling, Empirical Economics, Environment and Development Economics, Eurasian Business Review, Eurasian Economic Review, European Review of Agricultural Economics, Feminist Economics, Health Economics, International Journal of Comparative Sociology, International Journal of Mapower, International Journal of Consumer Studies, International Journal of Social Welfare, IZA World of labor, Journal of Agricultural Economics, Journal of Business Venturing, Journal of Consumer Studies and Home Economics, Journal of Cultural Economics, Journal of European Social Policy, Journal of Family and Economic Issues, Journal of Happiness Studies, Journal of Health Economics, Journal of Population Economics, Journal of Poverty, Journal of Product Innovation Management, Journal of Regional Science, Journal of Socio-Economics, Labour Economics, Moneda y Crédito, Papers in Regional Science, Regional Studies, Review of the Economics of the Household, Review of Managerial Science, Review of Public Economics, Revista de Economía Aplicada, Revista de Economía Laboral, Scientometrics, Small Business Economics, Social Indicators Research, Sustainability, The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy, Transportation, Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice, and Urban Studies.

RESEARCH PROJECTS 2020-2022: “Mobility of the Population, Health, Welfare and Sustainability” Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. Lead Researcher: J. Ignacio Giménez Nadal. PID2019-108348RA-I00. 2020-2022: “Population Economics, Labour Markets and Industrial Economics”. Regional Government of Aragón and FEDER. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. S32_20R. 2020-2021: “Spanish Network of Experimental and Behavioural Economics”. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities. Lead Researcher: Pablo Brañas. RED2018-102353-T. 2020-2020: “Commitment in the Household and Labor/Leisure Decisions”. Programa COVID19 Santander-Unizar. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. UZ 261246. 2020-2020: “Are people's daily commutes healthy and sustainable? Empirical evidence in Aragon and Spain”. University of Zaragoza. Lead Researcher: José Ignacio Giménez Nadal. JIUZ-2019-S0C-09. 2020-2020: “Socio-geographic analysis of the time available of members of the Army in Spain: are there differences by gender? Is the weather relevant? Center of the Defense Zaragoza (Ministry of Defense). Lead Researcher: Javier del Valle Melendo. CUD2019-02. 2019-2020: “The school-labor transition in Europe: effects of the early leaving school”. Center of the Defense Zaragoza (Ministry of Defense) - University of Zaragoza. Lead Researcher: Héctor Bellido Bellón. UZCUD2019-SOC-02. 2017-2019: “Population Economics, Labour Markets and Industrial Economics”. Regional Government of Aragón and FEDER. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. S32_17R. 2017-2018: “The share of paid and unpaid work between women and men”. Fundazione Giacommo Brodolini (European Commission-DG Justice, Consumers and Gender Equality). Italy. Lead Researcher: José I. Giménez Nadal. JUST/2015/RGEN/PR/EQUA/0088. 2017-2017: “Cooperation and Generosity”. University of Zaragoza. Spain. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. UZ2017-SOC-03. 2015-2018: “Determinants of life satisfaction among minority elders in the United States”. Institute of Aging. Boston College. United States of America. Lead Researcher: Rocío Calvo. 2016-2016: “The inter-generational mobility of housework time: gender differences in the US and Europe and policy recommendations”. Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. PRX15-00186. 2013-2016: “Inter-generational transfers and population welfare”. Spanish Ministry of Economics and Competitiveness. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. ECO2012-34828. 2011-2011: “Self-employed mothers: balancing family and work”. Spanish Ministry of Health and Social Policy. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. I+D+i 249/10. 2009-2012: “Family, population and welfare”. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. ECO2008-01297.

3

2007-2009: “Job satisfaction in Spain: a socioeconomic analysis of the geographical differences”. Regional Government of Aragon. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. PM026/2007. 2006-2008: “Family decisiones, efficient bargaining and welfare”. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. SEJ2005-06522 2004-2006: “Family, children and the labour market: efficiency and cooperation”. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. BBVA Foundation. 2003-2016: “Family Economics and Industrial Economics”. Regional Government of Aragón and FEDER. Spain. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. 2002-2005: “Family labour supply: theory and evidence using the new collective models”. Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. SEC2002-01350 2002-2004: “The socio-economics of psychological disorders: unemployment and other risk factors”. Spanish Ministry of Health and Consumption. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. PI021501. 2000-2000: “Socio-economic analyses of the effects of women's health, measured through the use of medical and health services, access, recruitment and working conditions: are there any discriminatory behavior?”. Spanish Ministry of Work and Social Services. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. 1999-2001: “Socio-economic proposals to improve the health of the school-age population in relation to the habitual consumption of tobacco, alcohol and illegal drugs”. Spanish Ministry of Education and Culture, and European Commission. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. 2FD97-2057. 1999-1999: “Economic evaluation of the housework and care for children and the elderdy developped by women: quantitative and quealitative effects on family poverty of the establishment of economic aid to these activities”. Spanish Ministry of Work and Social Services. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. 1998-1998: “Work developped by married women outside and inside the home: similarities and differences between educational levels”. Spanish Ministry of Work and Social Services. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. 1998-1998: “Economic analysis of education in Aragon: sectorial proposals to improve social welfare”. Regional Government of Aragon. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. 1996-1996: “Economic analysis of the welfare inequality in Spain”. University of Zaragoza. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina. 1994-1995: “Economic growth and convergence: theoretical foundations and national and international empirical evidence”. University of Zaragoza. Lead Researcher: José Alberto Molina.

PAPERS IN JOURNAL OF CITATION REPORTS (JCR) 1. Giménez-Nadal, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2021). Two-way commuting: Asymmetries from time use surveys Journal of Transport , forthcoming. 2. Campaña, J.C., Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2021). Sex ratios and work in Latin American households. Latin American Economic Review, forthcoming. DOI: 10.47872/laer-2021-30-3. 3. Giménez-Nadal, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2021). The intergenerational correlation of employment in Europe: A cross-country analysis”. Applied Economics Letters, forthcoming. DOI: 10.1080/13504851.2021.1904107. 4. Molina, J.A., Giménez-Nadal, J.I. and Velilla, J. (2020). Sustainable commuting: Results from asocial approach and international evidence on carpooling. Sustainability, 12(22), 9587. DOI:10.3390/su12229587. 5. Giménez-Nadal, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2020). Commuting and self-employment in Western Europe. Journal of Transport Geography, forthcoming. DOI: 10.1016/j.trangeo.2020.102856. 6. Giménez-Nadal, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2020). Testing urban efficiency wages in France and Spain. Empirical Economics, forthcoming. DOI: 10.1007/s00181-020-01928-x. 7. Molina, J.A. (2021). The Work-Family Conflict: Evidence from the recent decade and lines of future research. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 42, 4-10. DOI: 10.1007/s10834-020-09700-0. 8. Molina, J.A., Iñíguez, D., Ruiz, G. and Tarancón, A. (2021). Leaders among the leaders in Economics: A network analysisi of the Nobel Prize laureates. Applied Economics Letters, 28(7), 584- 589. DOI: 10.1080/13404851.2020.1764478. 9. Molina, J.A. (2020). Family and entrepreneurship: new empirical and theoretical results. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 41, 1-3. DOI:10.1007/s10834-020-09667-y. 10. Campaña, J.C., Giménez-Nadal, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2020). Self-employed and employed mothers in Latin American families: are there differences in paid-work, unpaid work and child care?. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 41, 52-69. DOI:10.1007/s10834-020-09660-5.

4

11. Molina, J.A., Ferrer, A., Iñiguez, D., Rivero, A., Ruiz, G. and Tarancón, A.(2020). Network analysis to measure academic performance in Economics. Empirical Economics, 58, 995-1018. DOI:10.1007/s00181-018-1546-0. 12. Giménez-Nadal, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2020). Work time and well-being for workers at home: evidence from the American Time Use Survey. International Journal of Manpower, 41(2), 184-206. 13. Giménez-Nadal, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2019). Green commuting and gasoline taxes in the United States. Energy Policy, 132, 324-331. DOI:10. 1016/j.enpol.2019.05.048. 14. Giménez-Nadal, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2019). Modeling commuting time in the US: Bootstrapping techniques to avoid overfitting. Papers in Regional Science, 98(4), 1667-1684. DOI:10.1111/pirs.12424. 15. Giménez-Nadal, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2019). Daily feelings of US workers and commuting time. Journal of Transport & Health, 12, 21-33. DOI: 10.1016/j.jth.2018.11.001. 16. Giménez, J.I. , Molina, J.A. and Silva, E. (2019). On the relationship between violent conflict and wages in Colombia. Journal of Development Studies, 55(4), 473-489. DOI: 10.1080/00220388.2018.1425393. 17. Giménez, J.I. , Lafuente, M., Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2019). Resampling and bootstrap algorithms to asses the relevance of variables: applications to cross-section entrepreneurship data. Empirical Economics, 56, 233-267. DOI:10.1007/s00181-017-1355-x. 18. Molina, J.A., Ferrer, A., Giménez-Nadal, J.I., Gracia-Lázaro, C., Moreno, Y. and Sánchez, A. (2019). Intergenerational cooperation within the household: A Public Good game with three generations. Review of Economics of the Household, 17, 535-552. DOI: 10.1007/s11150-018-9414-4. 19. Molina, J.A., Velilla, J. and Ortega, R. (2018). Why older workers become entrepreneurs? International evidence using fuzzy set methods. The Journal of the Economics of Ageing, 12, 88-95. DOI: 10.1016/j.jeoa.2018.03.004. 20. Giménez, J.I. , Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2018). The commuting behavior of workers in the United States: differences between the employed and the self-employed. Journal of Transport Geography, 66, 19-29. DOI: 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2017.10.011. 21. Campaña, J.C., Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2018). Gender norms and the gendered distribution of total work in Latin American households. Feminist Economics, 24(1), 35-62. DOI: 10.1080/13545701.2017.1390320. 22. Giménez, J.I. , Molina, J.A. and Velilla, J. (2018). Spatial distribution of US employment in an urban efficiency wage setting. Journal of Regional Science, 58, 141-158. DOI: 10.1111/jors.12351. 23. Ferrando, S., Duarte, R. and Molina, J.A. (2018). How to escape poverty through education? Intergenerational evidence in Spain. Applied Economics Letters, 25(9). 624-627. DOI: 10.1080/13504851.2017.1352073. 24. Marcén, M., Molina,J.A. and Morales, M. (2018). The effect of culture on the fertility decisions of immigrant women in the United State”. Economic Modelling, 70, 15-28. DOI: 10.1016/j.econmod.2017.10.006. 25. Giménez, J.I. , Molina, J.A. and Zhu, Y. (2018). Intergenerational mobility of housework time in the United Kingdom. Review of Economics of the Household, 16 (4), 911-937. DOI: 10.1007/s11150- 017-9374-0. 26. Campaña, J.C., Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2017). Increasing the human capital of children in Latin American countries: the role of parents’ time in childcare. Journal of Development Studies, 56(3), 805-825. DOI:10.1080/00220388.2016.1208179. 27. Andaluz, J., Marcén, M. and Molina, J.A. (2017). The effects of inter-generational transfers on the marital surplus. The Manchester School, 85(3), 320-338. DOI: 10.1111/manc.12148. 28. Molina, J.A., Campaña, J.C. and Ortega, R. (2017). Children’s interaction with the Internet: time dedicated to communications and games. Applied Economics Letters, 24(6), 359-364. DOI: 10.1080/13504851.2016.1192270. 29. Giménez, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Ortega, R. (2017). Like my parents at home? Gender differences in childrens’ housework in Germany and Spain. Empirical Economics, 52(4), 1143-1179. DOI:10.1007/s00181-016-1100-x. 30. Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2016). Commuting time and household responsabilities: evidence using propensity score matching. Journal of Regional Science, 56, 332-359. DOI: 10.1111/jors.12243. 31. Bellido, H., Molina, J.A., Solaz, A. and E. Stancanelli (2016). Do children of the first marriage deter divorce?. Economic Modelling, 55, 15-31.

5

32. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2016). Smoking transmission in-home across three generations. Journal of Substance Use, 21 (3), 268-272. DOI:10.3109/14659891.2015.1018970. 33. Molina, J.A., Campaña, J.C. and Ortega, R. (2016). What do you prefer for a relaxing time at home: Reading, watching TV, or listening to the radio?. Applied Economics Letters, 23(18), 1278-1284. DOI: 10.1080/13504851.2016.1150943. 34. Campaña, J.C., Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2016). The satisfaction of university students in Spain: differences by field of study. Applied Economics Letters, 23(7), 506-509, DOI: 10.1080/13504851.2015.1083079. 35. Bellido, H., Marcén, M. and Molina, J.A. (2016). The fffect of culture on fertility behavior of US teen mothers. Feminist Economics, 22(3), 101-126. DOI:10.1080/13545701.2015.1120881. 36. Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2015). Voluntary activities and daily happiness in the US. Economic Inquiry, 53 (4), 1735-1750. DOI: 10.1111/ecin.12227. 37. Borderías, L., Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2015). Adiction and other reasons adolescents smokers give to justify smoking. Substance Use and Misuse, 50, 1552-1559. DOI: 10.3109/10826084.2015.1023453. 38. Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2015). Health status and the allocation of time: cross-country evidence from Europe. Economic Modelling, 46(2), 188-203. DOI: 10.1016/j.econmod.2014.12.034 39. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2015). Social interaction in alcohol-impaired driving. Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse, 25 (1), 57-64. DOI: 10.1080/1067828X.2014.896760. 40. Molina, J.A. (2014) Altruism and monetary transfers in the household: inter- and intra generation issues. Review of Economics of the Household, 12 (3), 407-410. DOI: 10.1007/s11150-014-9259-4. 41. Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2014). Commuting time and labour supply in the Netherlands: a time use study. Journal of Transport Economics and Policy, 48 (3), 409-426. 42. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2014). Are estimated peer effects on smoking robust? Evidence from adolescent students in Spain. Empirical Economics, 46, 1167-1179. 43. Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2014). Regional unemployment, gender and time allocation of the unemployed. Review of Economics of the Household, 12 (1), 105-127. 44. Molina, J.A., Giménez, J.I., Cuesta, J.A., García, C., Moreno, Y. and Sánchez, A. (2013). Gender differences in cooperation: experimental evidence on high school students. PLOS ONE, 8 (12), e83700. 45. Molina, J.A. (2013). Altruism in the household: in-kind transfers in the context of kin selection. Review of Economics of the Household, 11, 309-312. DOI: 10.1007/s11150-013-9214-9. 46. Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2013). Parents’ education as determinant of educational childcare time. Journal of Population Economics, 26, 719-749. DOI 10.1007/s00148-012-0443-7. 47. Marcén, M. and Molina, J.A. (2012). Informal caring-time and caregiver satisfaction. European Journal of Health Economics, 13, 683-705. DOI: 10.1007/s10198-011-0322-2. 48. Giménez, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Ortega, R. (2012). Self-employed mothers and the work-family conflict. Applied Economics, 44, 2133-2148. 49. Giménez, J.I., Molina, J.A. and Sevilla, A. (2012). Social norms, partneships and children. Review of Economics of the Household, 10, 215-236. 50. Molina, J.A., Navarro, M. and Walker, I. (2011). Intergenerational well-being mobility in Europe. Kyklos, 64, 253-270. 51. Labeaga, J.M., Molina, J.A. and Navarro, M. (2011). Deprivation using satisfaction measures in Spain: an evaluation of unemployment benefits. Journal of Policy Modeling, 33, 287-310. 52. Campion, MJ., Candeal, J.C., García, O., De Miguel, J.R., Induráin, E. and Molina, J.A. (2011). Aggregation of preferences in crisp and fuzzy settings: functional equations leading to possibility results. International Journal of Uncertaintly, Fuzziness and Knowledge-based Systems, 19, 89-114. 53. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2011). Peer effects, unobserved factors and risk behaviours in adolescence. Revista de Economía Aplicada, 29, 125-152. 54. García, I., Molina, J.A. and Montuenga, V. (2011). Gender differences in childcare: time allocation in five European countries. Feminist Economics, 17 (1), 119-150. DOI: 10.1080/13545701.2010.542004. 55. García, I., Molina, J.A. and Montuenga, V. (2010). Intra-family distribution of paid-work time. Applied Economics, 42, 589-601. DOI: 10.1080/00036840701704469. 56. García, I., Molina, J.A. and Navarro, M. (2010). The effects of education on spouse’s satisfaction in Europe. Applied Economics, 42, 3607-3618. DOI: 10.1080/0036840802314572.

6

57. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2009). El abuso juvenil de alcohol: estimaciones count data. Revista de Economía Aplicada, 49, 81-104. 58. Gil, A.I. and Molina, J.A. (2009). Alcohol demand among young people in Spain: an addictive QUAIDS. Empirical Economics, 36, 515-530. 59. Gil, A.I. and Molina, J.A. (2007). Human development and alcohol abuse in adolescence. Applied Economics, 39, 1315-1323. DOI: 10.1080/00036840701346238. 60. Andaluz, J. and Molina, J.A. (2007). On the stability of bargaining solutions in family decision models. Review of Economics of the Household, 5 (4), 405-418. 61. Duarte, R. and Molina, J.A. (2006). Risk determinants of suicide attempts among adolescents. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 65, 407-434. 62. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2006). Marijuana consumption and school failures among Spanish students. Economics of Education Review, 25, 472-481. 63. Duarte, R. and Molina, J.A. (2004). Alcohol abuse among adolescents: regional evidence from Spain. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 28, 18-27. 64. Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2004). Modeling the optimal fiscal policy on tobacco consumption. Journal of Policy Modeling, 26, 81-93. 65. Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2004). "Will a special tax on tobacco reduce lung cancer mortality? Evidence for EU countries". Applied Economics, 36, 1717-1722. 66. Molina, J.A. and Ortega, R. (2003). Effects of employee training on the performance of North- American firms. Applied Economics Letters, 10, 549-552. 67. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (2002). Inter-regional wage differentials in Spain. Applied Economics Letters, 9, 209-215. 68. Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2001). Testing for the rational addiction hypothesis in Spanish tobacco consumption. Applied Economics Letters, 8, 211-215. 69. Escario, J.J. and Molina J.A. (2001). Why do European consumers smoke? Responses from the rational addiction model. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 25, 30-42. 70. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (2001). The effects of region on the welfare and monetary income of Spanish families. Urban Studies, 38, 2415-2424. 71. Molina, J.A. (1998). Analyzing the effects of price changes on the cost of living of consumers using true indices. Applied Economics Letters, 5, 639-644. 72. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (1998). Household labour supply with rationing in Spain. Applied Economics, 30, 1557-1570. 73. Molina, J.A. (1997).Modelling the Spanish imports of vehicles using a source differentiated demand system. Applied Economics Letters, 4, 751-755. 74. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (1996). Unemployment as a constraint on labour supply and goods demand in Spai. Applied Economics Letters, 3, 149-154. DOI: 10.1080/135048596356555. 75. Molina, J.A. (1996). Is Spanish consumer behaviour consistent with the utility maximization? A nonparametric respons". Applied Economics Letters, 3, 237-242. DOI: 10.1080/758520871. 76. Molina, J.A. (1994). Food demand in Spain: an application of the Almost Ideal System. Journal of Agricultural Economics, 45, 252-258.

OTHER REFEREED PAPERS 1. Lasierra, J.M., Molina, J.A. and Ortega, R. (2016). How does work managemnt improve job satisfaction? Evidence from Spain. Economics Bulletin, 36(2), 1202-1213. 2. Molina, J.A., Velilla, J. and Ortega, R. (2016). The decision to become an entrepreneur in Spain: the role of household finances. International Journal of Entrepreneurship, 20(1), 57-73. 3. Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2016). Health inequality and the uses of time for workers in Europe: policy implications. IZA Journal of European Labor Studies, 5 (2). 4. Gil, A., Molina, J.A. and Ortega, R. (2016). Determinants of training transfer in the wine industry: conceptual hypotheses and results for Rioja. The Journal of Wine Research, 27(1), 65-83. DOI:10.1080/09571264.2015.1116440. 5. Molina, J.A. (2015). Caring within the family: reconciling work and family life. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 36, 1-4. DOI: 10.1007/s10834-015-9441-8. 6. Grossbard, S., Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2014). Racial intermarriage and household production. Review of Behavioral Economics, 1(4), 295-347. DOI: 10.1561/105.00000013. 7. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2014). Broader vs. closer social interactions in smoking. Mind & Society, 13, 183-194. DOI: 10.1007/s1 1299-013-0135-3

7

8. Candeal, J.C., Induráin, E. and Molina, J.A. (2013). The consensus functional equation in agreement theory. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 228, 219-235. 9. Andaluz, J., Marcén, M. and Molina, J.A. (2013).Which spouse first decides in the household? The dynamics of bargaining. Theoretical Economics Letters, 3, 69-77 10. Candeal, J.C., Induráin, E. and Molina, J.A. (2012). Numerical representability or ordered topological spaces with compatible algebraic structure (Erratum). ORDER, 29, 227. 11. Candeal, J.C., Induráin, E. and Molina, J.A. (2012). Numerical representability or ordered topological spaces with compatible algebraic structure. ORDER, 29, 131-146. 12. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2011). Me, my classmates and by budies: analysing peer group effects on student marijuana consumption. Education Economics, 19 (1), 89-105. DOI: 10.1080/09645290902796332. 13. Molina, J.A. and Montuenga, V. (2009). “he motherhood wage penalty in Spain. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 30, 237-251. DOI: 10.1007/s10834-009-9153-z. 14. Andaluz, J. and Molina, J.A. (2007). How does the altruistic parental transfers affect the welfare gains of marriage?. Research in Economics, 61, 1-9. 15. García, I., Molina, J.A. and Navarro, M. (2007). Modelling interdependences between spouses by estimating income satisfaction. Economics Bulletin, 4 (10), 1-5. 16. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2007). Supporting the endogenous relationship between well-being and employment for US individuals. Atlantic Economic Journal, 35, 279-288. 17. Andaluz, J., Molina, J.A. and Vázquez, I. (2007). The stability of intergenerational cooperation in altruistic families. Economics Bulletin, 3 (39), 1-7. 18. García, I., Molina, J.A. and Navarro, M. (2007). How Satisfied are Spouses with their Leisure Time? Evidence from Europe. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 28 (4), 546-565. 19. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2006). The psychological behaviour of young Spanish consumers. Journal of Consumer Policy, 29, 176-189. 20. Gil, A.I. and Molina, J.A. (2005). The demand behaviour of consumers in Peru: a demographic analysis using the QUAIDS. The Journal of Developing Areas, 39, 191-206. 21. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2005). Participation and consumption of illegal drugs among adolescents. International Advances in Economic Research, 11, 1-17. 22. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2003). Marijuana consumption and violence: is there a bi- directional association?. Atlantic Economic Journal, 31, 292 23. Molina, J.A. (2002). Modelling the demand behaviour of Spanish consumers using parametric and non-parametric approaches. Journal for Studies in Economics and Econometrics, 26, 19-36. 24. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (2001). Labour supply and inequality for wage-earning farm households in Spain. Agricultural Economics Review, 2, 56-79. 25. Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2000). Estimating anticipated and non-anticipated demand elasticities for cigarettes in Spain. International Advances in Economic Research, 6, 782-793. 26. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (2000). Is the income a good welfare indicator for Spanish households? A comparison between both distributions. Journal of Income Distribution, 9, 1-12. 27. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (1999). How do workers decide their jobs: the influence of income, wage and job characteristics. Managerial and Decision Economics, 20, 189-204. 28. García, I. and Molina, J.A. (1999). Labor supply, child care and welfare in Spanish households. International Advances in Economic Research, 5, 430-445. 29. Molina, J.A. (1999). Is leisure weakly separable from consumption goods in Spain? Economie Apliquée, 52, 125-143. 30. Molina, J.A. (1997). Two-stage budgeting as an economic decision making process for Spanish consumers. Managerial and Decision Economics, 18, 27-32. 31. Molina, J.A. (1996). Testing for the utility maximization hypothesis of consumers using the revealed preference theory. Journal of Consumer Studies and Home Economics, 20, 131-143. 32. Molina, J.A. (1995). The intertemporal behaviour of French consumers. Economie Apliquée, 48, 175- 191. 33. Molina, J.A. (1994). Food expenditure patterns in the Mediterranean countries. Rivista di Economia, Agricoltura e Ambiente, 5, 17-21. 34. Molina, J.A. (1994). Predictions of Spanish food consumption using a demand system. Rivista di Economia, Agricoltura e Ambiente, 5, 25-27.

8

BOOKS/CHAPTERS OF BOOKS 1. Chiappori, P.A. and Molina, J.A (2020). The intra-spousal balance of power within the family: cross- cultural evidence. In Culture and Families: Research and Practice (Eds. Kim Halford and Fons van de Vijver). Elsevier. DOI: 10.1016/B978-0-12-815493-9.00006-5. 2. Molina, J.A., Giménez-Nadal, J.I. and Velilla, J. (2019). Oferta de trabajo y demografía en Europa: Evolución durante la última década con datos EU-SILC. In ILO Congress for the Future of Work. Sevilla, Spain. 3. Grossbard, S., Giménez, J.I. and Molina, J.A. (2015). Racial intermarriage and household production. In The Economics of Marriage (Editor: Shoshana Grossbard), Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd. And in A Price Theory of Marriage: Why Marriage Markets Affects Employment, Consumption and Savings (Editor: Shoshana Grossbard). Springer. 4. Molina, J.A. (2011). Household Economic Behaviors (Editor). Springer. 5. Duarte, R., Escario, J.J. and Molina, J.A. (2010). Drug use among the Spanish adolescents: testing for a causal gateway effect. In Health Education: Challenges, Issues and Impact (Editors: Andre Fortier and Sophie Turcotte). Nova Science Publishers, ISBN 978-1-60876-568-3. 6. Molina, J.A. and Rosa, F. (1997). Testing for the intertemporal separability hypothesis on Italian food demand. In Agricultural Marketing and Consumer Behavior in a Changing World (Eds. B. Wierenga, A.Van Tilburg, K. Grunert, J.E.M. Steenkamp and M. Wedel). Kluwer Academic Publishers.

PAPERS IN SPANISH 1. 2010. Economistas, 125, 54-58. 2. 2006. Economía Aragonesa,April, 71-98. 3. 2005. Acciones e Investigaciones Sociales,21, 137-155. 4. 2002. Cuadernos Aragoneses de Economía,12, 293-306. 5. 2001. Revista de Gestión Pública y Privada, 6, 25-30. 6. 2000. Estudios de Construcción y Transportes, 86, 7-32. 7. 2000. Hacienda Pública Española, 153-2, 45-52. 8. 2000. Economistas, 86, 129-142. 9. 1999. Revista de Gestión Pública y Privada, 4, 139-156. 10. 1999. Hacienda Pública Española, 148, 187-196. 11. 1999. Revista de Estudios Regionales, 55, 141-158. 12. 1998. Estudios de Economía Aplicada, 9, 119-132. 13. 1997. Estudios de Economía Aplicada, 7, 1-12. 14. 1996. Cuadernos de Economía, 24, 27-49. 15. 1995. Investigación Agraria: Economía, 10, 5-26. 16. 1995. Estudios de Economía Aplicada, 4, 87-94. 17. 1995. Ekonomiaz, 33, 208-223. 18. 1995. Cuadernos de Economía, 23, 491-512. 19. 1994. Cuadernos Aragoneses de Economía (2ª ép.), 4, 117-133. 20. 1993. Investigación Agraria: Economía, 8, 331-348. 21. 1993. Cuadernos Aragoneses de Economía (2ª ép.), 3, 393-406. 22. 1990. Cuadernos Aragoneses de Economía, 14, 101-118. 23. 1990. Cuadernos Aragoneses de Economía, 15, 19-34. 24. 1989. Investigación Agraria: Economía, 4, 35-50. 25. 1989. Investigación Agraria: Economía, 4, 81-108.

INTERNATIONAL MEETINGS 2020: Society Economics Household-SEHO (Venice, Italy), EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Barcelona, Spain). 2019: Society Economics Household-SEHO (Lisbon, Portugal), ILO Congress for the Future of Work (Sevilla, Spain), Spanish Econ Assoc Meeting (Alicante, Spain). 2018: BIFI 2018 International Conference (Zaragoza, Spain), Society Economics Household-SEHO (, France), EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Antwerp, Belgium), EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Lyon, France), EuropeanMeetingEconometricSociety (Cologne, Germany), Spanish Econ Assoc Meeting (Madrid, Spain).

9

2017: XX Applied Economics Meeting (Valencia, Spain), XII Spanish Labour Economics Conference (Valladolid, Spain) 2015: Fourth SOLE/EALE World Meeting (Montreal, Canada). 2014: Frontiers on Time Use Research (Paris, Francia). 2012: American Economic Association-AEA (Chicago, EEUU). EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Bern, Switzeland), IZA/SOLE Transantlantic Meeting in Labor Economists (Buch/Ammersee, Germany). 2011: EuropEconAss-EEA (Oslo, Norway), InterntAssTimeUseResearch-IATUR (Oxford, UK), Conference of the Economics of the Family (Paris, France). 2009: EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Seville, Spain), EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Tallinn, Estonia), EuropEconAss-EEA (Barcelona, Spain), InterntAssTimeUseResearch-IATUR (Lueneburg, Germany). 2008: EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (London, UK), EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Amsterdam, The Netherlands), EuropEconAss-EEA (Milan, Italy). 2007: EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Chicago, EEUU), EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Oslo, Norway), BritishSocPopulationStudiesConf-BSPS (London, UK), EuropEconAss-EEA (Budapest, Hungary). 2006: InternMeetingSocialChoiceWelfare-IMSCW (Estambul, Turquía), EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Verona, Italy), EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Praga), BritishSocPopulationStudiesConf-BSPS (London, UK), ConfEuropeanPanelUsersNetwork-EPUNet (Barcelona, Spain), EuropEconAss- EEA (Viena, Austria). 2004: EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Bergen, Noruega), EuropConfHealthEcon-ECHE (London, UK). 2003. InternHealthEconAss-iHEA (San Francisco, EEUU). 2002. EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Bilbao, Spain), EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Paris, France). 2001. PopulationAssAmerica-PAA (Washington, EEUU). 2000. PopulationAssAmerica-PAA (Los Angeles, EEUU), InternAtlanticEconConfer-IAEC (Munich, Germany), EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Bonn, Germany). 1999. InternAtlanticEconConfer-IAEC (Vienna, Austria), EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Torino, Italy), EAAE (Varsovia, Poland). 1998. InternAtlanticEconConfer-IAEC (Rome, Italy), EuropSocPopulationEcon-ESPE (Amsterdam, The Netherlands). 1997. InternAtlanticEconConfer-IAEC (London, UK), EuropEconAss-EEA (Toulouse, France). 1996. EuropAssAgricEcon-EAAE (Wageningen, The Netherlands), EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Crete, Greece), SouthernEuropAssEcTheory-ASSET (Alicante, Spain). 1995. EuropAssLabourEcon-EALE (Lyon, France). 1994. EuropAssAgricEcon-EAAE (Reading, UK). 1993. SouthernEuropAssEcTheory-ASSET (Barcelona, Spain).

PH.D. THESIS SUPERVISED 2020. Jorge Velilla Gambó “Population behaviors and labor supply of the employed and the self- employed: efficiency wages and time use, intrahousehold commitment, and Intergenerational transmissions”. Honours and International Mention. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2018. Juan Carlos Campaña. “Self-employment, employment, and time allocation decisions: social norms, the work-life-family balance, and collective labor supply”. Honours and International Mention. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2014. Héctor Bellido. “Fertility decisions: the role of divorce laws, culture and its impact on marital status”. Honours and European Mention. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2010. Miriam Marcén. “Marital and parental bargaining: divorce, inter-generational transfers and caring”. Honours and European Mention. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2010. José Ignacio Giménez. “Time use within the household: household production, work-life balance and racial discrimination”. Honours and European Mention. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2007. María Navarro. “Economic analysis of well-being in the family: household production, altruism and deprivation”. Honours and European Mention. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2006. Iñaki Vázquez. “Intra-family decisions and cooperation in households with an adult son/dauther”. Honours. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2004. Ana Isabel Gil. “Economic analysis of alcohol demand among young people”. Honours and European Mention. University of Zaragoza, Spain. 2000. José Julián Escario. “Fiscal models on tobacco consumption”. Honours. University of Zaragoza, Spain.

10

1996. Inmaculada García. “Labour supply and inequality in Spain”. Honours. University of Zaragoza, Spain.

CONSULTING PROJECTS (as Lead Researcher) 2013-2013: Socioeconomic methods to improve the quality of life of individuals: optimum allocation of income and time transfers. Campus of International Excellence “Iberus”. 2011-2011: Are university students altruistic? An approximation from experimental economics. . The Aragonese Economic Foundation-FUNDEAR. 2008-2009: Socio-economic evidence in Zaragoza after the of EXPO2008. City Council of Zaragoza and Association of Trade and Industry of Zaragoza. 2007-2007: Elderly population and dependence: intrafamily allocation of caring in Aragon and Spain. The Aragonese Economic Foundation-FUNDEAR. 2004-2004: Goods demand in Aragon: estimations from the new demand models with panel data. The Aragonese Economic Foundation-FUNDEAR. 2003-2003: Drug consumption among adolescents: gateway evidence. The Aragonese Economic Foundation-FUNDEAR.

OTHER Five periods of research activity, 1989-2019 (Spanish Ministry of Education). Six periods of teaching activity, 1987-2016 (University of Zaragoza, Spain). Top 2% Economists in Spain (IDEAS/RePEc): https://ideas.repec.org/top/top.spain.html Top 5% Economists in the world (IDEAS/RePEc): https://ideas.repec.org/top/top.person.all.html

11