Speakers

On job market

Stephen Hansen

Imperial College Business School

Stephen Hansen is Associate Professor of Economics at Imperial College Business School. He has served as an academic consultant to the Bank of England, and has recently held fellowships at the Hoover Institute and Alan Turing Institute. He is currently a Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research and CESifo, where he also serves on the Scientific Advisory Board. His research interests combine monetary policy, organizational economics, and machine learning. His academic papers have been published in leading international journals, including the Journal of Political Economy, Quarterly Journal of Economics, and Review of Economic Studies.

Philipp Harms

Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany

Philipp Harms is professor of international economics at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (Germany). He received his doctorate from the University of St. Gallen, held positions at the University of Konstanz and at RWTH Aachen University, and also teaches at the Study Center Gerzensee. His main research areas are international economics, macroeconomics and political economy. He has published several papers in these areas as well as a masters-level textbook on international macroeconomics.

Qun Harris

Bank of England

Qun Harris is a member of the Economic Analysis Team at the Prudential Regulatory Authority at the Bank of England.

Anna Hartmann

University of Cologne

I am a PhD student at University of Cologne. I hold a bachelor's and a master's degree in economics from University of Cologne and spent part of my studies at University of Edinburgh, London School of Economics, and Universitat Pompeu Fabra. My research crosses the fields of macroeconomics and labor economics.

Benny Hartwig

Goethe University Frankfurt and Deutsche Bundesbank

I am Ph.D. student in economics at Goethe University Frankfurt. My research specializes in developing and applying macroeconometric methods to study the effects of monetary policy and identifying indicators of systemic risk.

Masazumi Hattori

Hitotsubashi University

Masazumi Hattori is a professor at Hitotsubashi University in Japan. Before the position, he was a professor at Nihon University. He worked at the Bank for International Settlements and the Bank of Japan. His research covers topics on monetary policy, international finance, corporate finance, financial regulation, and banking. He has a B.A. in economics from Hitotsubashi University and a M.Phil. and D.Phil. in economics from the University of Oxford. He has held a Visiting Research Fellow position at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Sebastian Hauptmeier

European Central Bank

Daniela Hauser

Bank of Canada

I hold a Ph.D. in Economics from the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (Spain). I joined the Bank of Canada in 2013, where I am currently holding the position of Principal Researcher in the Model Development Division of the Canadian Economic Analysis Department. My primary research interests lie in the fields of International Macroeconomics, Monetary and Fiscal Policy, and Applied Macroeconomics.

Luke Haywood

MCC Berlin

My work focuses on labour and public economics, with a special focus on questions relating to climate change. With colleagues at MCC Berlin (Mercator Research Institute on Climate Change), we have recently looked into the labour market and regional effects of the decline of the coal sector. I am also interested in transport economics and tax policy.

Burkhard Heer

University of Augsburg

Burkhard Heer is professor at the University of Augsburg, Germany. He is the author of the two graduate textbooks 'Dynamic General Equilibrium Modeling: Computational Methods and Applications' (with Alfred Maussner, 2009, 2nd ed.) and 'Public Economic: The Macroeconomic Perspective' (2019).