Johannes Stroebel (New York University – Stern School of Business, NBER and CEPR), 30 June, "A quantity-based approach to constructing climate risk hedge portfolios"
Joanna Lahey(Texas A&M University), 27 June, "Age and the labor market for Hispanics in the United States"
Alexandre Corhay (Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto), 16 June, “Inflation risk and the finance-growth nexus”
Monika Schnitzer (University of Munich), 8 June, "The Breakup of the Bell System and its Impact on US Innovation"
Maureen O’Hara (Johnson College of Business, Cornell University), 23 May, "Financial Market Ethics"
Haroon Mumtaz (Queen Mary University London), 18 May, "Impulse response estimation via flexible local projections"
Christian Pröbsting (KU Leuven), 13 May, "Quantifying the Benefits of Labor Mobility in a Currency Union"
Attila Lindner (University College London), 11 May, "Firm Heterogeneity and the Impact of Payroll Taxes"
Frank Bohn (Radboud University), 9 May, ""Let me out, I’m trapped in a blur”: Political Budget Cycles, Uninformed Voters and Government Competence Uncertainty"
Wolfgang Lemke (European Central Bank), 5 May, "Natural rate chimera and bond pricing reality"
Matthew Smith (Edinburgh Napier University, UK), 28 April, "Fostering network collaboration – a topic modelling approach"
Manuel Hoffman (Harvard University), 27 April, "Television and the Labor Market: Evidence from Natural Experiments in West and East Germany"
Pei Huang (Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research in Mannheim), 25 April, "Racial Disparities in the Health Effects from Air Pollution: Evidence from Ports"
Francesco Zanetti (University of Oxford), 7 April, "State Dependence of Fiscal Multipliers: The Source of Fluctuations Matters"
Takaaki Aoki (Kagawa University), 31 March, "Finding a potential of human flow for revealing urban spatial structures"
Nicola Coniglio (Bari University), 25 March, "The geography of displacement, refugees’ camps and social conflicts"
Giulia Giupponi (Bocconi University), 11 March, "Subsidizing Labor Hoarding in Recessions: The Employment and Welfare Effects of Short Time Work"
Markus Brunnermeier(Princeton University, NBER and CEPR), 15 February, "Platform, Tokens, and Interoperability”
Fabiano Ribeiro (Lavras Federal University, Brazil), 3 February, "The Physics of Cities (complexity, scaling laws, urban scaling/allometry)"
2021
Johannes Pfeifer(Universität der Bundeswehr München), 16 December, "Mr. Keynes meets the Classics: Government Spending and the Real Exchange Rate"
Fabio Canova, (BI Norwegian Business School, CAMP and CEPR), 2 December, “Costly disasters and the role of fiscal policy”
Katrin Auspurg (LMU Munich), 26 November, "Understanding the ‘why’ and ‘when’ aspects of ethnic discrimination and segregation: A multifactorial experimental approach to explore mechanisms and conditions on the German housing market"
Nick Netzer (University of Zurich), 19 November, "Endogenous Risk Attitudes"
José-Luis Peydró (Imperial College, UPF-CREI-ICREA and CEPR), 21 October, "Monetary Policy and Inequality"
Mirabelle Muûls (Imperial College London), 22 September, “Managerial and Financial Barriers to the Net-Zero Transition”
Sarah Zubairy (Texas A&M University), 17 September, “State dependent government spending multipliers: Downward nominal wage rigidity and sources of business cycle fluctuations”
Vivian Zhanwei Yue (Emory University, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, NBER and CEPR), 24 June, “Sovereign Risk and Financial Risk”
Morten Ravn (University College London), 29 April, “Financial Frictions: Macro vs Micro Volatility”
Harald Uhlig (The University of Chicago), 15 April, “Central Bank Digital Currency: When Price and Bank Stability Collide”
Enrique G. Mendoza (University of Pennsylvania and NBER), 1 April, “A Macroeconomic Model of Healthcare Saturation, Inequality and the Output-Pandemia Tradeoff”
Florin Bilbiie (University of Lausanne), March 23, “Aggregate-Demand Amplification of Supply Disruptions: The Entry-Exit Multiplier”
Nir Jaimovich (University of Zurich), March 11, “Job Hunting: a costly quest”
Luciana Juvenal (Bank of England), February 19, “Terms-of-Trade Shocks are Not all Alike"
Raghuram G. Rajan (University of Chicago Booth School of Business & NBER), February 15, "Going the Extra Mile: Distant Lending and Credit Cycles"
Ricardo Caballero (MIT Economics, USA), February 11, "Monetary Policy with Opinionated Markets"
Lawrence J. Christiano (Northwestern University), January 21, “Financial Dollarization in Emerging Markets: Efficient Risk Sharing or Prescription for Disaster?”
2020
Ludwig Straub (Harvard University, USA), December 10, "Heterogeneous Agents and the Exchange Rate Channel of Monetary Policy"
François Koulischer (Université du Luxembourg), December 11, "Low Interest Rate and the Distribution of Household Debt"
Michael D. Bordo (Rutgers University, USA), November 24, "Do Enlarged Fiscal Deficits Cause Inflation: The Historical Record"
Javier Bianchi (Federal Reserva Bank of Minneapolis, USA), November 19, "Bank-runs, Contagion and Credit Easing"
Joseph E. Stiglitz (Columbia Business School, Nobel Prize Laureat in Economics 2001), November 14, "Bail-ins and Bail-outs: Incentives, Connectivity and Systemic Stability"
René M. Stulz (The Ohio State University, NBER and ECGI), November 10, "Is Financial Globalization in reverse after the 2008 Global Financial Crisis? Evidence from corporate valuations."
Camille Landais (London School of Economics, UK), November 6, "The Impact of Family Policies on the Dynamics of Gender Inequality"
Hanno Lustig (Stanford Graduate School of Business, USA, NBER and SIEPR), October 29, "The U.S. Public Debt Valuation Puzzle"
Giancarlo Corsetti (Cambridge University, USA and CEPR), October 15, "Exchange Rate Misalignment and External Imbalances: What is the Optimal Monetary Policy Response?"
2019
Karel Mertens (Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, USA), November 14, "Do Monetary Policy Announcements Shift Expectations?"
Uyangha Turmunkh (IÉSEG School of Management, Lille France), October 24, "Social and Strategic Ambiguity versus Betrayal Aversion"
Dimitris Koribilis (University of Glagow), October 4, "High-Dimensional Macroeconomic Forecasting Using Message Passing Algorithms"
Markus Eberhardt (University of Nottingham), October 3, "Facets of Democratic Change and their Causal Effect on Economic Growth"
Ralph De Haas (Director of Research at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development), September 23, "Gender Discrimination in Small Business Lending. Evidence from a Lab-in-the-Field Experiment in Turkey"
Francesco Cecchi (Wageningen University), September 5, "Ambiguity Attitudes and Willingness to Pay for Weather Insurance: Experimental Evidence from Rural Kenya"
Werner De Bondt (DePaul University, Chicago), June 21, "The Risk Tolerance of Couples and Stock Market Participation"
Olivier L'Haridon (Université de Rennes), June 20, "An Effective and Simple Tool for Measuring Loss Aversion"
Zahra Siddique, (University of Bristol), June 13, "Violence and Female Labor Supply"
Patrick Arni (University of Bristol), May 7, “The Role of Incomplete Information in Shaping Policy Effects: Evidence from Unemployment Insurance”
Stefan Dercon (University of Oxford), April 30, “The future in mind: short and long-run impact of an aspirations intervention in rural Ethiopia"
Claude Diebolt (Université de Strasbourg & Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), March 3, “We are Ninjas: How Economic History has Infiltrated Economics”
Robert Lensink (University of Groningen, University of Wageningen, IEEF and CIBIF), February 14, “Uptake and Impacts of Interlinked Index-based Insurance with Credit and Agricultural Inputs: Experimental Evidence from Ethiopia”
Michael Lechner (University of St. Gallen), January 24, “Modified Causal Forests for Estimating Heterogeneous Causal Effects”
2018
Kostas Tatsiramos (University of Luxembourg, LISER and IZA), December 13, "On the origins of socio-economic inequalities: Evidence from a “children of twins” design"
Ian Burn (Stockholm University), November 29, "Ageist Language in Job Ads and Age Discrimination in Hiring: Evidence from a Field Experiments"
Hans Fehr (University of Würzburg), October 11, "Tenure choice, porfolio structure and long-term care - Optimal risk management in retirement”