Speakers

On job market

Margaux Suteau

CY Cergy Paris Université/ ESSEC Business School

I am a first year PhD student at CY Cergy Paris Université and ESSEC Business School. My research lies at the intersection of gender economics, labor economics and education. I am currently working on two projects. In the first paper, I study the effect of women’s inheritance rights in India on their labor supply and education. In the second paper, I analyze the underrepresentation of women in computer science.

Joanna Syrda

University of Bath, School of Management

Joanna Syrda is an Assistant Professor in Business Economics at University of Bath, School of Management. Her current interests are in marriage market, household behaviour and intrahousehold allocation, traditional gender identity and other social norms, and gender differences in competitive behaviour and performance under pressure. Her research has been featured in media outlets across the globe including The Times and Times of India, Forbes, Independent, The Telegraph, Die Welt, Le Figaro, Huffington Post, New York Post, Men's Health, VICE, BBC, ABC News, CBS News and more.

Andrzej Szczepaniak

Ghent University

I am an Economics Ph.D. candidate with research fellowship at Ghent University (Belgium), supervised by Gert Peersman. My areas of research interest are primarily in international macroeconomics, financial and monetary economics, and macroeconometrics and forecasting. I am an empirical macroeconomist, primarily interested in monetary policy related questions. I hold a Master of Research degree in Economics and Statistics from Université libre de Bruxelles (Belgium) and a Master of Economics degree from University of Southampton (UK). Prior to embarking on a Ph.D., I worked for four years in financial markets, including as UK Economist for Barclays Investment Bank based in London.

Andrea Tambalotti

New York Fed

Andrea Tambalotti is a Vice President in the Research Group at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. His recent research focuses on forecasting the macroeconomic impact of the COVID-19 epidemic and on the change in the relationship between inflation and real activity over time and its underlying causes. Dr. Tambalotti serves as editor of the Review of Economic Dynamics. He holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Princeton University and a B.A. and M.A. from Universita' Bocconi in Milan.

Daniel te Kaat

University of Groningen

I am an Assistant Professor of Finance at the University of Groningen, working mostly on issues related to international finance, in particular on the interaction between international capital flows, financial system stability and the real economy.

Gian Luca Tedeschi

University of Nottingham

I am a Ph.D. candidate in Economics at the University of Nottingham, where I am affiliated with the CeDEx, CREDIT and NICEP research groups. Starting July 2020, I will join the Department of Economics at the University of Padua as a post-doctoral researcher. My research interests primarily lie in the field of comparative development, with a particular focus on the role played by culture, institutions and other deep-rooted factors.

Marc Teignier

University of Barcelona

Marc Teignier is currently a Serra-Húnter Lecturer Professor at the University of Barcelona (Economic Theory section). Prior to that, he worked as a Professor at the University of Alicante and as a post-doc researcher at the University of the Basque Country. Marc earned his PhD in economics from The University of Chicago in June 2010 after receiving BA and MA degrees in economics from Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona, Spain). Marc teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in Microeconomics and Macroeconomics and his research interests include the study of the macroeconomic effects of gender inequalities and talent misallocation, as well as the determinants of structural transformation. His articles have been published at the Journal of Development Economics, the Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, the Journal of Human Capital, or the B.E. Journal of Macroeconomics. Marc has also worked as an external consultant for the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the United Nations.
He has worked as an external researcher for the Inter-American Development Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations, and the World Bank. Together with David Cuberes, in 2016 he collaborated with the Interamerican Development Bank under the call “Gender Gaps in Science, Technology and Innovation in LAC”. David and Marc also collaborated with the International Monetary Fund, co-authoring two chapters of the book ‘Women, Work, and Economic Growth - Leveling the Playing Field’. They also worked with the World Bank in many different projects, like a background article for the World Development Report 2012, as well as different articles on the effects of gender inequality in the Balkans, the Caucasus region, Mexico, Uruguay, or Malaysia. Finally, Marc also worked for the Human Development Report Office of the United Nations during the initial stages of the Human Development Report 2012.

Emil Temnyalov

University of Technology Sydney

I work on mechanism and market design, information economics, and contests. I am motivated by questions with policy implications and significant social welfare consequences. I am currently working on new information-theoretic models of differential treatment and discrimination. If you are interested in the application of mechanism and market design to education and labor and you share my passion for policy-oriented theory, please send me an email. I am very happy discuss possible collaborations.

Marianne Tenand

Erasmus University Rotterdam

I am a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam. I received a Ph.D in Economics from the Paris School of Economics in 2018. My background is in Applied Economics and policy evaluation methods. I am mostly interested in social policies, health care systems and public economics. I have received a MSCA (`Marie Curie’) Individual Fellowship to pursue my research in the field of long-term care policies.

Silvana Tenreyro

London School of Economics