Ott 262020
 
Monday, October 26
12.00 ET (17.00 Rome time). Hunt Allcott (New York University): Digital addiction.
Host: The Behavior Change for Good Virtual Seminar.
Zoom link: register here.
12.00 ET (17.00 Rome time). Neha Upadhayay (Université Paris-Est Créteil): Medicine with side effects – Foreign aid and targeted protection.
Host: Graduate Student International Political Economy (GSIPE) workshop.

12.30 Rome time. Bård Harstad (University of Oslo): Trade and Trees.
Host: Bocconi Department of Economics.
Zoom link: please contact sara.picciallo@unibocconi.it.
13.00 Amsterdam time: ESA’s job-market candidates’ seminar.
Host: ESA.
Program:
Lidia Vidal-Meliá (Universitat Jaume I): Dynamic Incentives to Invest in an Advanced Abatement Technology: An Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Commitment Timing to an Environmental Policy.
Tong Wang (Erasmus University Rotterdam): Follow the money, not the majority: Incentivizing and aggregating expert opinions with Bayesian markets.
13.00 New York time (18.00 Rome time). Ulrich Volz (SOAS Centre for Sustainable Finance): Climate Change and Sovereign Risk.
Zoom link: register here.

15.30 UTC (16.30 Rome time). Mirjam Reutter (European University Institute): The Morning After: Prescription-Free Access to Emergency Contraceptive Pills.
Host: Virtual Seminar on the Economics of Risky Health Behaviors (VERB).
16.00 Paris time. Nicholas Bedard (Wilfrid Laurier University): Ironing, Sweeping, and Multivariate Majorization: Optimal Mechanisms for Mass-Produced Goods.
Host: Virtual Market Design Seminar.
Zoom link: register here.
16.00 Rome time. Aron Culotta (Illinois Institute of Technology): Language, perception, and reality in online communication.
Host: Bocconi DMI Webinar.
Zoom link: email dmi@unibocconi.it.
16.00 CET. Beata Javorcik (University of Oxford): Unravelling Deep Integration: Local Labour Market Effects of the Brexit Vote.
Host: Online Geneva Trade and Development Workshop.
Zoom link: register here.
16.30 Rome time. David Hémous (University of Zurich) on Automating Labor: Evidence from Firm-level Patent Data.
Host: EIEF.
Zoom link: email events@eief.it to receive the link.
17.00 Rome time. Lawrence Berger (University of Wisconsin Madison): Do Foster Care Placement and ‘Aging Out’ of Care Lead to Poor Educational, Social, and Economic Outcomes?
Host: Bocconi Dondena Center.
17.00 London time (18.00 Rome time). Francisco Ferreira (LSE): The active ingredient of inequality.
Host: LSE.
Zoom link: register here.
Host: Junior Economics of Migration Seminar.
Zoom link: register here.
Tuesday, October 27
11.30 ET (16.30 Rome time). Dawit Mekonnen (IFPRI): Irrigation-Nutrition Linkages in Sub-Saharan Africa: Lessons from small scale irrigations in Ethiopia, Ghana, and Tanzania.
Host: Seminar in Water Economics Online (SWELL).
Zoom link: sign up here.
12.00 Rome time. Arno Riedl: The Role of Fairness Ideals in Coordination Failure and Success.
Host: IMS Brown Bag Seminar.

12.00 EDT (17.00 Rome time). Rohini Pande (Yale University): Investing in the Next Generation: The Long-Run Educational Impacts of a Liquidity Shock.

Host: CEPR Virtual Development Webinars.
12.45 Rome time. Matthias Lang (University of Munich): Mechanism Design with Narratives.
Host: Bocconi Department of Economics Theory and Experiments Series.
Zoom link: by invitation: for information or to receive the invitation link contact erika.somma@unibocconi.it.
13.00 Barcelona time. Tim Besley (LSE): The Political Economy of the Great Lockdown: Does Free Media Make a Difference?
Wednesday, October 28
9.00 Wellington time (23.00 Rome time). Moumita Roy (George Mason University): First belong, then lead: An experimental analysis of the role of group identity in leadership effectiveness.
Host: Monash Applied Young Economist Webinar.
9.00 Rome time. Christian Pescher (Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg): Participation, Productivity or Pressure: Which Ideators are Successful in Crowdsourcing?
Host: Bocconi Department of Marketing.
Zoom link: contact dip.mkt@unibocconi.it.
12.00 NYT time (17.00 Rome time).
Brett Green (Olin WUSTL): Due diligence.
John Cochrane (Hoover Stanford): A Fiscal Theory of Monetary Policy with Partially-Repaid Long-Term Debt.
Host: Virtual Finance Theory Seminar at École Polytechnique.
Zoom link: Register by email to mail@virtualfinancetheoryseminar.com to receive the link.
12.00 Sydney time (2.00 Rome time).  Simon Grant (ANU): Delegation and Ambiguity in Correlated Equilibrium.
Zoom link: register here.
12.00 ET (17.00 Rome time). Hani Mansour (University of Colorado, Denver): Voting and Political Participation in the Aftermath of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic.
Host: Economics of LGBTQ+ Individuals Virtual Seminar Series.
Zoom link: Please sign up to receive the link to the Zoom meeting each week.
12.00 Pacific time (20.00 Rome time). Gonzalo Cisternas (MIT): Signaling with Private Monitoring.
Link: Live streamed on twitch.tv/caltechecontheory, where viewer questions are forwarded to the speaker.
12.30 New York time (17.30 Rome time): ESA’s job-market candidates’ seminar.

Host: ESA.
Program:
Jonathan Oxley (Florida State University): Examining Donor Preferences for Charity Religious Affiliation.
Prithvijit Mukherjee (Utah State University): Can we talk our way to efficiency?
Jessica White (University of Arkansas): Choice Overload and Charitable Giving: Can There Be Too Much of a Good Thing?
14.30 Lisbon time (15.30 Rome time). Benjamin Marx (Sciences-Po): Eat Widely, Vote Wisely? Lessons from a Campaign Against Vote Buying in Uganda.
Host: Novafrica Seminars on Economic Development.
Zoom link: register here.
15.00 Paris time. Sébastien Fontenay (Université Libre de Bruxelles): The Unintended Consequences of Maternity Leave Allowance on Fertility and Career Decisions.

Host: Webinar in Gender and Family Economics.

Zoom link: email webinargenderfamilyecon@gmail.com to receive the link.
15.00 London time (16.00 Rome time). Mauricio Salazar-Saenz (UNC-Chapel Hill): A household search model of the labor market with home production.
Host: Applied Young Economist Webinar.
Host: JKU Online Economics Research Seminar.
Zoom link: email econseminar@jku.at to register and receive the link.
16.30 Rome time. Dean Karlan (Northwestern University): “Cooperation in the commons: Evaluating investment in community-based rangeland management in Namibia” and “To punish or not to punish: Using public goods games to measure treatment effects on social norms”.
Host: Bocconi Department of Economics joint with Collegio Carlo Alberto.
Zoom link: by invitation: for information or to receive the invitation link contact patrizia.pellizzari@unibocconi.it.
17.00 Rome time. Francesca Trivellato (Institute for Advanced Studies Princeton): When Property Rights Are Not Enough: Lessons from Renaissance Florence.
Host: Graduate Institute Geneva International Macro History Online Seminar.
Zoom link: register here.
Thursday, October 29
11.00-14.30 Boston time: first day of the ThReD (Theoretical Research in Development Economics) Conference 2020.
Host: Boston University.
Program:
Eliana La Ferrara (Bocconi University): A Stepping Stone Approach to Understanding Harmful Norms: Theory and Evidence from Somalia.

Roberta Ziparo (Aix-Marseille School of Economics): Investment Decisions with Endogenous Budget Share Allocations inside the Household.

Rajiv Sethi (Columbia University): Costly Screening and Statistical Discrimination.
Has van Vlokhoven (Stockholm University): Diffusion of Ideas and Network Linkages.
Zoom link: register here.
12.15 Oslo time. Benjamin Enke: Moral universalism and the structure of ideology.
Host: FAIR – Centre for Experimental Research on Fairness, Inequality and Rationality at the Norwegian School of Economics.
Zoom link: register here from Monday to receive the link.
13.00 Rome time. Shota Ichihashi (Bank of Canada): Addictive Platforms.

Host: Mannheim Centre for Competition and Innovation (MaCCI) IO Virtual Seminar.
Zoom link: register here.
13.00 Rome time. Emanuele Colonnelli (University of Chicago): Selfish Corporations.
Host: EIEF.
Zoom link: email events@eief.it to receive the link.
13.00 London time (14.00 Rome time). Eugenio Proto (University of Glasgow): Does Being Angry Limit Your Ability to Think Strategically?
Host: LSE Wellbeing Thursday Seminar.
Zoom link: RSVP t.sagoo@lse.ac.uk and you will receive a Zoom link on the day of the seminar.
13.00 ET (18.00 Rome time). Jennifer Doleac (Texas A&M University): Algorithmic Risk Assessment Tools in the Hands of Humans.
Host: Online Economics of Crime Seminar.
Zoom link: register at https://bit.ly/crimeseminarlist
16.00 UK time (17.00 Rome time). Inga Deimen (Arizona): Authority in a theory of the firm.
Host: Virtual Seminars in Economic Theory.
Zoom link: register here.
16.00 Brussels time. Galina Zudenkova (TU Dortmund University): Information and Communication Technologies, Protests and Censorship.
Host: Online Political Economy Seminar Series (OPESS).
Zoom link: register here.

16.00 Rome time. Vicky Fouka (Stanford University): Racial Diversity, Electoral Preferences, and the Supply of Policy: the Great Migration and Civil Rights.
Host: Bocconi Dondena Center.
18.15 Zurich time. WZB Distinguished Lecture in Social Sciences by Ernst Fehr (University of Zurich): Social Preferences and Redistributive Politics.
Host: University of Zurich.
Zoom link: register here.
Friday, October 30
11.00-14.30 Boston time: second day of the ThReD (Theoretical Research in Development Economics) Conference 2020.
Host: Boston University.
Program:

Alessandra Peter (Princeton University): Network-based Hiring: Local Benefits, Global Costs.

James Choy (Bureau of Economic Analysis): Kompromat: a Theory of Blackmail as a System of Governance.

Dominic Rohner (University of Lausanne): Ethnic Conflicts and the Informational Dividend of Democracy.
Jean-Philippe Platteau (University of Namur): The Quran and the Sword: The Strategic Game Between Autocratic Power, the Military, and the Clerics.

Zoom link: register here.
13.00 ET (18.00 Rome time). Kendal Kennedy (Mississipi State University): Education, Crowding-out, and Black-White Employment Gaps in Youth Labor Markets: Evidence from No Pass, No Drive Policies.
Zoom link: fill out the Google form to register: bit.ly/DiscrimSeminar
14.30 UK time (15.30 Rome time). Mobolaji Alabi (University of Reading): The financial impact of Financial Fair Play regulation: Evidence from the English Premier League.
Host: Reading Online Sport Economics Seminars (ROSES).
Zoom link: Contact James Reade at j.j.reade@reading.ac.uk to join via MS Team.
14.30 Montreal time (19.30 Rome time). Jesús Fernández-Villaverde (University of Pennsylvania): Cryptocurrencies, Fintech, and All That: Monetary Economics in the 21st Century.
Host: Marleau Lecture Series on Economic and Monetary Policy (Department of Economics, University of Ottawa).
Zoom link: register here.
15.00 Penn time (20.00 Rome time). Hugh Macartney (Duke University): Incentive Design in Education: A Distributional Analysis.
Host: Penn State Department of Economics.
Zoom link: register here.
16.00 Dublin time. Emi Nakamura (University of California Berkeley): The slope of the Phillips curve. Evidence from the U.S.
Host: Trinity College International Macro Seminar Series.
Zoom link: register emailing emtcd@tcd.ie


16.00 Rome time: IGIER Policy Seminar on “School Reform: Lessons from US and UK Experiences”.

Host: IGIER Bocconi.

Speakers:
Joshua Angrist (MIT)
Stephen Machin (LSE)

16.00 London time (17.00 Rome time). Raffaella Giacomini (UCL): Identification and Inference under Narrative Restrictions.
Host: The Gary Chamberlain Online Seminar in Econometrics.
Zoom link: register here.
Saturday, October 31
11.00-14.30 Boston time: third day of the ThReD (Theoretical Research in Development Economics) Conference 2020.
Host: Boston University.
Program:

Karna Basu (Hunter College): Commitment as Extortion?

Hosny Zoabi (The New Economic School): The Microfinance Disappointment: An Explanation based on Risk Aversion.
Gani Aldashev (UBS): Marriage Timing and Forward Contracts in Marriage Markets.

Ragnar Torvik (Norwegian University of Science and Technology): The Inefficient Combination: Competitive Markets, Free Entry, and Democracy.

Zoom link: register here.
 Posted by on 26 Ottobre 2020  Senza categoria  Commenti disabilitati su Upcoming Virtual seminars (26/10/2020)
Ott 212020
 
In collaboration with the European PhD Programme in Socio-Economic and Statistical Studies of the University of Rome “La Sapienza” and its coordinator Fabio Sabatini, we would like to point out the online seminars which will be held week after week and which may be of interest to our students. 
Monday, October 19


3.30 UTC (17.30 Rome time): Augustine Denteh (Tulane University), “The Effect of SNAP on Obesity in the Presence of Endogenous Misreporting”.
Host: Virtual Seminar on the Economics of Risky Health Behaviors (VERB) at Cornell.

Zoom link: https://cornell.zoom.us/j/98504144973?pwd=Mk94OGVoRVRXMHpHMjUxOUVmcy8vZz09  (Webinar ID:  985 0414 4973  Password: VERB).

10.00 ET (16.00 Rome time): Joe Altonji (Yale University), “Marriage Dynamics, Earnings Dynamics, and Lifetime Family Income”.
Host: CEPR Gender Economics Seminar Series.
Zoom link: register here.
13.00 Rome time: ESA’s job-market candidates’ seminar.
Prateek Chandra Bhan (University of Glasgow): “Do role models increase student hope and effort? Evidence from India”.
José J. Domínguez (University of Bologna): “Committee Quotas and Gender Gap in Recruitment: A Laboratory Experiment”.
Host: ESA.
Zoom link: click here.
13.30 London time (14.30 Rome time): RES Webinar “Preparing to Succeed in the European Job Market for Economists“.
Speakers: Tim Besley (LSE), Michael McMahon (Oxford), Marina Della Giusta (Reading), Maarten De Ridder (LSE), Caitlin Brown (Manchester).
Host: Royal Economic Society.
Zoom link: register here.
16.30 Rome time: Maia Güell (University of Edinburgh), “Unemployment Duration Variance Decomposition à la ABS: Evidence from Spain“.
Host: Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance.
Zoom link: send an email to events@eief.it to receive the link.
17.30 CET (17.30 Rome time): Adam Levai (UC Louvain) and Riccardo Turati (UAB), “The Impact of Immigration on Workers Protection”.
Zoom link: register here.
Host: IGIER Seminar Series.

Tuesday, October 20
8.30 Rosario time (13.00 Rome time): First day of The Economics of Informality 2020 Conference.
Host: Universidad del Rosario.
9.00-19.00 Rome time: First day of The 61st Annual Conference of the Italian Economic Association.
Host: Società Italiana degli Economisti.
Program: click here.
Zoom link: click on the links below each session’s program and use the passcode 41539.
13.00 Rome time: Guido Tabellini (Bocconi University), “Economic Shocks and Populism: The Political Implications of Reference-Dependent Preferences“.
Host: Barcelona GSE Applied Economics Seminar Series.

Wednesday, October 21
8.30 ECT (8.30 Rome time): Raphael Espinoza, Giancarlo Corsetti, and Beatrice Weder di Mauro, “Public Investment for the Recovery: IMF October 2020 Fiscal Monitor”.
Monitor”.
Host: Graduate Institute Geneva and International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Zoom link: register here.
8.30 Rosario time (13.00 Rome time): Second day of The Economics of Informality 2020 Conference.
Host: Universidad del Rosario.
9.00-19.00 Rome time: Second day of The 61st Annual Conference of the Italian Economic Association.
Host: Società Italiana degli Economisti.
Program: click here.
Zoom link: click on the links below each session’s program and use the passcode 41539.
10.00 AEST (2.00 Rome time): Ernan Haruvy (McGill University), “Bargaining for others”.
Zoom link: register here.
12.00 EDT (18.00 Rome time): Christina Schneider (UCSD), “Coordinated Financial Rescues”.
12.00 ET (18.00 Rome time): Hyunmin Park (University of Chicago), “Specific Human Capital and Employment Dynamics”.
Host: Economics of LGBTQ+ Individuals Virtual Seminar Series.
Zoom link: register here.
13.00 Sydney time (4.00 Rome time): Marta Boczoń (University of Pittsburgh), “Uncertainties in Measuring Economic Inequality”.
Host: Applied Young Economist Webinar Series at Monash Soda Lab.
Zoom link: register here.
14.00-17.30 CET (15.00-18.30 Rome time): first day of the European Research Workshop in International Trade (ERWIT) 2020.
Host: CEPR and Università di Milano.
Program:

Marc Melitz (Harvard): “Exporting Ideas: Knowledge Flows from Expanding Trade in Goods”.

Andreas Moxnes (Princeton): “The Geography of Knowledge Production: Connecting Islands and Ideas”.
Swati Dhingra (LSE): “Trade and Worker Deskilling”.

Johannes Boehm (Sciences Po): “Misallocation in the Market for Inputs: Enforcement and the Organization of Production”.
Jan Haaland (Norwegian School of Economics): “Jobs and Technology in General Equilibrium: A Three-Elasticites”.
Gábor Békés (Central European University): “Measuring and Explaining the Nature of Buyer-Supplier Relationships Across Firms”.
Zoom link: register here.
14.30 Lisbon time (15.30 Rome time): Caroline Theoharides (Amherst College), “Medical Worker Migration and Origin-Country Human Capital: Evidence from U.S. Visa Policy“.
Host: NOVAFRICA@Nova SBE seminar series.
Zoom link: register here.
15.00 London time (16.00 Rome time): Marta Boczoń (Pittsburgh), “Quantifying uncertainties in estimates of income and wealth inequality”.
Zoom link: click here.

16.00 UK time (17.00 Rome time): Claudio Ferraz (Vancouver School of Economics), “Political Power, Elite Control, and Long-Run Development: Evidence from Brazil“.
Host: CSAE Development Economics Webinar Series.
Zoom link: register here.
16.00 Rome time: Mark Armstrong (University of Oxford), “Patterns of Competitive Interaction”.
Host: CEPR Virtual IO Seminar series.
Zoom link: register here.
17.00 CET (17.00 Rome time): Morgan Kelly (University College Dublin), “Understanding persistence“.
Host: International Macro History Online Seminar Series.
Zoom link: register here.

17.30 Rome time: Michael Clemens (Center for Global Development) and Mariapia Mendola (Univ. Milano Bicocca), “Migration from Developing Countries: Selection, Income Elasticity, and Simpson’s Paradox“.

Zoom link: register here.

Thursday, October 22
8.30 Rosario time (13.00 Rome time): Third day of The Economics of Informality 2020 Conference.
Host: Universidad del Rosario.
9.00-19.00 Rome time: Third day of The 61st Annual Conference of the Italian Economic Association.
Host: Società Italiana degli Economisti.
Program: click here.
Zoom link: click on the links below each session’s program and use the passcode 41539.
12.00-16.00 ET (18.00-22.00 Rome time): first day of the NBER Market Design Working Group Meeting.
Host: NBER.
Program of the day (see http://conference.nber.org/sched/MDf20 for the list of speakers):
Accelerating a Covid-19 Vaccine.
The workshop will be live-streamed on NBER’s YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC79ELlHFewHXj5XDBcRloUQ/
12.30 ET (18.30 Rome time): William Larson (Federal Housing Finance Agency), “Nowcasting Unemployment Insurance Claims in the Time of COVID-19″.
Host: Columbian College of Arts & Science.
Zoom link: to register email forecasting@gwu.edu
13.00 ET (19.00 Rome time): Monica Deza (CUNY Hunter College), “Local access to mental healthcare and crime”.
Host: Online Economics of Crime Seminar organized by Jennifer Doleac (University of Texas Austin).
Zoom link: register at https://bit.ly/crimeseminarlist.


13.00 London time (14.00 Rome time): Maarten Lindeboom (Free University of Amsterdam), “Maternal Stress and Offspring Lifelong Labor Market Outcomes”.

Host: LSE/ CEP Wellbeing Thursday Seminar
Zoom link: RSVP to t.sagoo@lse.ac.uk and you’ll be sent a Zoom link on the day of the seminar.

14.00-17.30 CET (15.00-18.30 Rome time): second day of the European Research Workshop in International Trade (ERWIT) 2020.

Host: CEPR and Università di Milano.

Roberto Bonfatti (Universities of Padua): “Trade Disruption, Industrialisation, and the Setting Sun of British Colonial Rule in India”.
Gene Grossman (Princeton University): “When Tariffs Disturb Global Supply Chains”.
Ralph Ossa (University of Zurich): “Disputes in International Investment and Trade”.
Anna Gumpert (Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich): “Firm Organization with Multiple Establishments”.
Francis Kramarz (CREST): “Firm-to-Firm Trade: Imports, Exports, and the Labor Market”.
Zoom link: register here.

15.00 CET (15.00 Rome time): Johnson Garrett (Questrom School of Business), “Privacy & Market Concentration: Intended & Unintended Consequences of the GDPR“.
Host: Mannheim Centre for Competition and Innovation (MaCCI) Virtual IO Seminar Series.
Zoom link: Register here.
16.30 Rome time: Nicola Limodio (Bocconi University), “Terrorism Financing, Recruitment and Attacks“.
Host: Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance.
Zoom link: send an email to events@eief.it to receive the link.
17.00 Rome time: Economic Policy Panel Discussion: Fiscal Standards for Europe.
– Presentation by Olivier Blanchard
– Discussion presentations by Davide Debortoli (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) and Michael McMahon (University of Oxford)
– Panellist comments by Jakob von Weizsäcker (Federal Ministry of Finance, Germany) and Beatrice Weder di Mauro (The Graduate Institute, Geneva, INSEAD and President, CEPR)
Host: CEPR, CESIfo and Sciences Po.
Zoom link: register here.
17.00 Paris time (17.00 Rome time): Anne ter Wal (Imperial College London), “Understanding behavioral tradeoffs in networking for information: An interactive experiment with sociometric badges”.
Host: Barcelona GSE – SIE (Strategy, Innovation Entrepreneurship) Workshop.
Zoom link: register here.
Friday, October 23
8.30 Rosario time (13.00 Rome time): Fourth day of The Economics of Informality 2020 Conference.
Host: Universidad del Rosario.
9.00-18.30 Rome time: Fourth day of The 61st Annual Conference of the Italian Economic Association.
Host: Società Italiana degli Economisti.
Program: click here.
Zoom link: click on the links below each session’s program and use the passcode 41539.
9.30-13.00 Rome time: Workshop “COVID-19 and the Economy: Data, Theory and Policy”.
Host: Barcelona GSE.
Catia Nicodemo (Oxford University): “Measuring Geographical Disparities in England at the Time of COVID-19: Results Using a Composite Indicator of Population Vulnerability”.
Libertad Gonzales (UPF): “How the COVID-19 Lockdown Affected Gender Inequality in Paid and Unpaid Work in Spain”.
Edouard Schaal (UPF): “Optimal Lockdown in a Commuting Network”.
Chris Busch (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona): “On the Effectiveness of Stay-Home Policies Against a Pandemic”.
Zoom link: register here.

11.00 ET (17.00 Rome time): Teodora Paligorova (FRB), “The Side Effects of Shadow Banking on Liquidity Provision”.
Host: MoFiR Virtual Seminars on Banking.

Zoom link: register here.
12.00 ET (18.00 Rome time): Panel #3- “Beyond Facebook and Twitter: Diverse Media Diets and the 2020 Election”.
Host: NYU Center for Social Media and Politics: Election Seminar Series.
Zoom link: register here.
12.00-16.00 ET (18.00-22.00 Rome time): second day of the NBER Market Design Working Group Meeting.
Host: NBER.
Program of the day (see http://conference.nber.org/sched/MDf20 for the list of speakers):

“Meritocracy and Its Discontents: Long-Run Effects of Repeated School Admission Reforms”.

“Aftermarket Frictions and the Cost of Off-Platform Options in Centralized Assignment Mechanisms”.

Processing Reserves Simultaneously

The workshop will be live-streamed on NBER’s YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC79ELlHFewHXj5XDBcRloUQ/

12.30 CET (13.30 Rome time): David Levine (European University Institute), “The Whip and the Bible: Punishment Versus Internalization”.

Host: Ca’ Foscari Venice and University of Padua NEAT Seminars.

13.00 ET (19.00 Rome time): Mariana Laverde (Boston College), “Unequal Assignments to Public Schools and the Limits of School Choice”.
Host: Online Economics of Crime Seminar organized by Jennifer Doleac (University of Texas Austin).
Zoom link: register at http://bit.ly/DiscrimSeminar.
14.00-17.30 CET (15.00-18.30 Rome time): third day of the European Research Workshop in International Trade (ERWIT) 2020.
Host: CEPR and Università di Milano.

Chenzi Xu (Harvard University): “Reshaping Global Trade: The Immediate and Long-Term Effects of Bank Failures”.
Inga Heiland (University of Oslo): “Trade from Space: Shipping Networks and The Global Implications of Local Shocks”.
Harald Fadinger (University of Mannheim): “Robot Imports and Firm-level Outcomes”.
Isabelle Mejean (CREST): “Relationship Stickiness and Economic Uncertainty”.
Natalie Chen (University of Warwick), “Markups, Quality, and Trade Costs”.
Agnès Bénassy-Quéré (Paris School of Economics), “How Does TFP react to Financial Crises? Mixed Evidence from Three European Countries”.

Zoom link: register here.

14.30 UK time (15.30 Rome time): Reio Tanji (Osaka University), “Reference Dependence and Monetary Incentives: Evidence from Major League Baseball”.
Host: University of Reading Online Sport Economics Seminars (ROSES).
Teams link: Contact James Reade at j.j.reade@reading.ac.uk
Saturday, October 24
12.00-16.00 ET (18.00-22.00 Rome time): third day of the NBER Market Design Working Group Meeting.
Host: NBER.
Program of the day (see http://conference.nber.org/sched/MDf20 for the list of speakers):

Constrained Pseudo-Market Equilibrium“.

Investment Incentives in Near-Optimal Mechanisms

The workshop will be live-streamed on NBER’s YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC79ELlHFewHXj5XDBcRloUQ/
 Posted by on 21 Ottobre 2020  Senza categoria  Commenti disabilitati su 19/10/2020 – Upcoming Virtual Seminars
Feb 202020
 
Congratulations to our newly graduated PhD students in Economics and Business  from the 32nd cycle
Business track (Advisors Francesca Cabiddu, Ludovico Marinò e Giacomo Del Chiappa)
  • Jessica Mei Pung – “Transformative tourism experiences: An investigation of meanings and processes of tourist transformation”
  • Ester Napolitano – “Motivations, travel constraints and experiential dimensions of wine tourists’ behaviour”
  • Stefano Salaris – “Gender diversity in the boards of directors: an exploratory analysis of the Italian companies”
  • Ludovica Moi – “Organizing for the digital world: a pathway towards the agile marketing capability” (Doctor Europaeus)
  • Luca Sini – “Investigating motivations and constraints of travellers when using Airbnb for tourism services”

Panel of examiners: Luca del Bene (Università delle Marche), Giuseppe Melis (Università di Cagliari), Gerardo Patriotta (Warwick University)

 

Economics track (Advisor Rinaldo Brau)

  • Erica Delugas – “Essays in Applied Welfare Economics”
  • Cristian Usala – “Essays on Determinants of Tax and Service induced Mobility”

Panel of examiners: Fabio Cerina (Università di Cagliari), Daniela Sonedda (Università del Piemonte Orientale), Gilberto Turati (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano)

 

 Posted by on 20 Febbraio 2020  Senza categoria  Commenti disabilitati su Newly graduated PhD students from the 32nd Cycle
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