Speakers

On job market

Jan Schmitz

Radboud University

Michaela Schmöller

Bank of Finland

Michaela is an Economist at the Monetary Policy and Research Department of the Bank of Finland. She holds a Ph.D. from Aalto University School of Business. Her research interests are macroeconomics, monetary economics, business cycles and growth.

Isabel Schnabel

European Central Bank (ECB)

Isabel Schnabel is a member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank (ECB) where she is responsible for Market Operations, Research and Statistics. Before joining the ECB, she was Professor of Financial Economics at the University of Bonn (currently on leave) and spokesperson of the Cluster of Excellence “ECONtribute: Markets & Public Policy”. From 2014 to 2019 she served as a member of the German Council of Economic Experts, and in 2019 she was Co-Chair of the Franco-German Council of Economic Experts. Her research focuses on financial stability, banking regulation, international capital flows and economic history.

Julie Schnaitmann

University of Konstanz

Julie Schnaitmann is an earlier career researcher in econometrics. Her research focuses on financial econometrics, empirical asset pricing and simulation-based econometrics. She is also interested in the forecast evaluation of risk measures and regularization in the factor model context.

Cornelius Schneider

Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods

After studying Economics and Public Policy at the Humboldt University and the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin, I finished my Master with a focus on Public Economics. Since 2016, I am a research fellow at the Max Planck Institute on Research for Collective Goods in a joint PhD program with the University of Cologne (supervised by Prof. Felix Bierbrauer). Mainly applying experimental methods, my research interests center around questions of optimal taxation and public finance in general.

Ulrich Schneider

Freie Universität Berlin

My research interests are Structural Econometrics, Behavioral Economics, and Labor Economics. I am especially interested in how individuals make decisions over their life-cycle and how behavioral elements impact these choices. I am an assistant professor at the Free University of Berlin. From 2018 until 2020, I was an assistant professor at the University of Groningen. I completed my Ph.D. in 2019 at the Free University of Berlin under the supervision of Peter Haan and Richard Blundell.

Claas Schneiderheinze

Kiel Institute for the World Economy

Before joining the Kiel Institute, Claas Schneiderheinze completed a Bachelor of Economics in Kiel and a Master of Development Economics in Göttingen. In September of 2016 he joined the Kiel Institute’s department of Poverty Reduction, Equity and Development as a research fellow and PhD candidate.

Antoinette Schoar

MIT Sloan School of Management

Antoinette Schoar is Stewart C. Myers-Horn Family Professor of Finance and Entrepreneurship at the MIT Sloan School of Management. She holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Chicago and an undergraduate degree from the University of Cologne, Germany. She is the co-chair of the NBER Corporate Finance group. Antoinette's research interests span from entrepreneurship and financing of small businesses in emerging markets to household finance and intermediation in retail financial markets. She has published numerous papers in the Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Economic, the Quarterly Journal of Economics and others. Antoinette is also the cofounder of ideas42 a non-profit organization that uses insights from behavioral economics and psychology to solve social problems

Raphael Schoenle

Brandeis University and Center for Inflation Research, Cleveland Fed

Raphael Schoenle is an Associate Professor of Economics at the Department of Economics at Brandeis University and the Brandeis International Business School. He is currently on leave from Brandeis as the Deputy Director at the Center for Inflation Research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. He holds a Ph.D. and Master’s degree in Economics from Princeton University, and a Master’s degree in Statistics from Harvard University where he also obtained his Bachelor’s degree in Economics. Prof. Schoenle’s research spans behavioral economics and household finance, firms’ pricing behavior, macro- and monetary economics and international macroeconomics. Professor Schoenle is a recipient of the 2012 Young Economist Award from the Austrian Economic Association, and his work has been funded by the National Science Foundation. He has been a research associate at the Federal Reserve Banks of Cleveland, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and a PER visiting fellow at Columbia University. He is a research associate at the Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and a visiting researcher at the Bureau of Labor Statistics. He has published in the American Economic Review, the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Monetary Economics, the Review of International Economics and the Journal of International Economics.

Pål Schøne

Institute for social research

Labour economist, focussing on empirical analyses of labour supply, economis of migration, and and skill formation in the labour market.