Seminars
Seminars
[Academic Events] Seminars in Politics and Society, Webinars in Society and Politics Gemma Dipoppa, University of Pennsylvania
"How Criminal Organizations Expand to Strong States: Migrants' Exploitation and Vote Buying in Northern Italy"
[Academic Events] Occasional Seminars Online Allievi Defense
SENIOR ALLIEVI 16:00 Pietro Ramella Title: Corporate structure and the parent company discount
[Academic Events] Occasional Seminars Online Allievi Defense
SENIOR ALLIEVI 10:30 Marcello Lanciani Title: Secured funding in the Euro Area: an econometric analysis to explain asset encumbrance 11.15 Federico Rodari Beyond the veil of Maya: Econometric Implications of News Shocks
[Academic Events] Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge POSTPONED: Pere Arque-Castells (Northwestern University)
"Measuring the Private and Social Returns to R&D: Unintended Spillovers versus Technology Markets"
[Academic Events] Seminars in Economics WEBINAR: Konrad Mierendorff (UCL)
"Keeping the Listener Engaged: a Dynamic Model of Bayesian Persuasion"
[Academic Events] Seminars in Economics POSTPONED: Claire Lim (QMUL)
"The Political Economy of Medicaid: Partisanship, Eligibility, and the Consequences of Cost-Saving Measures" Abstract: We explore the linkages between government ideology in U.S. states and geographic variation in Medicaid program design and operations. Medicaid eligibility criteria tend to be more generous in liberal states. Simultaneously, fee-for-service reimbursement rates for physician services have been notably lower…
[Academic Events] Seminars in Economics POSTPONED: Yingni Guo (Northwestern)
"Robust Monopoly Regulation" Abstract: We study the regulation of a monopolistic firm using a non-Bayesian approach. We derive the policy that minimizes the regulator’s worst-case regret, where regret is the difference between the regulator’s complete-information payoff and his realized payoff. When the regulator’s payoff is consumers’ surplus, he imposes a price cap. When his payoff…
[Academic Events] Seminars in Economics POSTPONED: Andrea Berardi (University of Venice)
"Convexity dominates risk premia in long-term forward rates"