Speakers

On job market

Julian Emmler

Humboldt-University Berlin

My name is Julian Emmler is a PhD candidate at Humboldt-University Berlin. I studied Economics at the University of Cologne and Trinity College Dublin (Bachelor) as well as at Humboldt-University Berlin and University of Toronto (Master). I'm a member of the CRC “Rationality and Competition” and a Research Assistant at the Chair of Econometrics at Humboldt-University Berlin. My research is concerned with Labor Economics, especially individual outcomes of regional mobility and job loss expectations, with a focus on East and West Germany in the years after reunification.

Jacint Enrich-Moya

Toulouse School of Economics (TSE)

PhD candidate at Toulouse School of Economics (TSE). Broadly interested in Environmental and Development Economics, with a focus on agriculture.

Raphael Epperson

University of Mannheim

Raphael is a Ph.D. candidate in Economics at the University of Mannheim, where he also obtained his Bachelor of Science (2015) and Master of Science (2018). During his studies, he spent one semester at the National University of Singapore, worked as a research assistant at the Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research, and served as a teaching assistant. His main research fields are Behavioral, Experimental, and Environmental Economics.

Andrey Ermolov

Gabelli School of Business, Fordham University

Andrey Ermolov is an economist working in the areas of asset pricing, macro finance, and financial econometrics. He received his PhD from Columbia Business School. His research has won multiple awards, including the WFA Cubist Systematic Strategies PhD Candidate Award for Outstanding Research; has been presented at leading economics and finance conferences, such as the NBER Summer Institute; and has been published in top field journals, such as the Journal of Econometrics.

Lucia Esposito

Banca d'Italia

I am a macroeconomist and applied theorist at the Bank of Italy (Monetary Policy Division) since May 2010. My research focuses on informational frictions in macroeconomics and banking.

Burcu Eyigungor

Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

Burcu Eyigungor is economic advisor and economist in the Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. She holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Bogazici University, Turkey and a Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles, USA. He has written on a wide range of macroeconomic topics, including sovereign debt crises, political economics, the mortgage crises, business cycles, business formation, and urban economics.

Marius Faber

University of Basel

I am a PhD Candidate in Economics at the University of Basel. I study the interplay between technology, trade, and labor markets.

Adrien Fabre

ETH Zürich

I have just completed my Ph.D. at the Paris School of Economics on the economics of the energy transition, and I am about to start a post-doc at ETH Zürich. Besides climate change, I also work on political preferences, social choice, and inequalities. I am interested in finding which policies are sustainable and/or politically acceptable, and how new decision processes can enhance our democracies.

Simona Fabrizi

University of Auckland

Dr Simona Fabrizi is a TSE-trained applied microeconomic theorist, based at the University of Auckland, where she holds a tenured position in the Department of Economics and is a member of the Centre for Mathematical Social Science (CMSS). She is a Co-Founder and Member of the Executive Board of the Asia-Pacific Industrial Organisation Society (APIOS). Previous academic positions include Massey University (Albany), Keele University (UK), UNSW (Australia), the University of the Basque Country (Spain), and the University of Mannheim (Germany).

Ranveig Falch

Max Planck Institute for Collective Goods

My primary field of research is behavioral economics, where I focus on issues that relate to labor-, education-, public- and development economics, such as gender discrimination, human capital investment and inequality acceptance for children. My work is primarily empirical, implementing experiments in controlled laboratory or field settings with nationally representative samples.