Seminars
Seminars
Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge Paula Stephan (Andrew Young School of Policy Studies Georgia State University)
"Estimating the Effects of Federal Funding on Scientific Productivity: the Etoile Project" (at Dipartimento di Economia "S. Cognetti de Martiis")
Seminars in Economics Guido Menzio (Penn)
"Shopping Externalities and Self-Fulfilling Unemployment Fluctuations"
Monday Lunch Seminars Edward Timmons (Saint Francis University)
"More Battles Among Licensed Occupations: Estimating the Effects of Scope of Practice and Direct Access on the Chiropractic, Physical Therapist, and Physician Labor Market"
Seminars in Economics Eddie Dekel (Northwestern/Tel Aviv)
"Optimal Allocation with Costly Veri
Seminars in Politics and Society Heike Solga (WZB Berlin Social Science Center)
"The impact of competencies and certificates on labor market outcomes in advanced societies"
Monday Lunch Seminars Alessandro Barattieri (ESG UQAM)
"Average-Cost Pricing: Some Evidence and Implications" Abstract We present new survey evidence on pricing behavior for more than 14,000 European firms, and study its macroeconomic implications. Among firms that are price setters, roughly 75% respond that their prices are set as a markup on total costs, a business practice termed "full cost pricing''. Only 25%…
Occasional Seminars William Tompson (OECD)
"Urbanising China" Abstract China anticipates an increase in its urban population of around 300 million over the next decades, having seen its urban population more than double to around 712 million between 1990s and 2012. China’s management of this process, which is without precedent in terms of speed or scale, will have huge and lasting…
Seminars in Politics and Society Sven Steinmo (EUI)
"Bringing People Back In: Institutions, History and Culture?"
Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge Paul David (Institute for Economic Policy Research, Stanford University)
"Rivalry and the Rules of the Game in Collective Problem‐Solving Learning more about Open Innovation processes from research on the microeconomics of computer coding competitions" (at Dipartimento di Economia "S. Cognetti de Martiis")
Seminars in Economics Michel Serafinelli (Toronto)
"Good Firms, Worker Flows and Local Productivity"
Seminars in Economics of Innovation and Knowledge Marco Vivarelli (Università Cattolica di Milano; SPRU, University of Brighton; IZA, Bonn)
"R&D drivers and age: Are young firms different?"
Seminars in Economics Adam Rosen (UCL)
"Generalized instrumental variable models"
Seminars in Politics and Society Peter Scholten (Rotterdam)
"The politics of migrant integration: recent trends in Europe"
Seminars in Economics Fabien Postel-Vinay (UCL)
"Did the Job Ladder Fail After the Great Recession?" Abstract We study employment reallocation across heterogeneous employers through the lens of a dynamic job-ladder model, where moreproductive employers spend more hiring effort and are more likely to succeed in hiring because they offer more. As a consequence, anemployer's size is a relevant proxy for productivity. We exploit…
Seminars in Economics Sven Rady (University of Bonn)
"Strongly Symmetric Equilibria in Bandit Games" Abstract This paper studies strongly symmetric equilibria (SSE) in continuous-time games of strategic experimentation with Poisson bandits. SSE payoffs can be studied via two functional equations similar to the HJB equation used for Markov equilibria that they generalize. This is valuable for three reasons. First, these equations retain the…
Monday Lunch Seminars Edoardo Grillo
"A Model of Educational Investment and Social Status"
Seminars in Economics Peter Sørensen (Copenaghen)
"Regulation of Dierentiated Stock Exchanges"
Seminars in Economics Debopam Bhattacharya (Oxford)
"Nonparametric Welfare Analysis for Discrete Choice" Abstract We consider empirical measurement of exact equivalent/compensating variation resulting from price-change of a discrete good, using individual-level data. Our set-up comprises utility functions which include unobserved heterogeneity of unknown dimension and are not required to be quasi-linear, parametrically specified or smooth -- thus allowing for extremely general preference-distributions.…