Speakers

On job market

Iuliia Grabova

DIW Berlin / Humboldt University of Berlin

I am a Ph.D. student at Humboldt University of Berlin and a research associate at DIW Berlin. I am focusing on topics in behavioral economics. Specifically, I study subjective expectations in financial, labor and housing markets. Moreover, I am examining the effectiveness of higher orders of reasoning for strategic information transmission. In my research, I conduct controlled laboratory experiments and apply econometric methods for the purpose of survey data analysis.

Almarina Gramozi

University of Cyprus

Mark Granberg

Linköping University

Mark is a 3rd year PhD candidate in Economics at Linköping University in Sweden, he is interested in labor market discrimination, experimental methods, and applied econometrics. In this presentation Mark will briefly discuss his recent publication in Labour Economics where he (together with Per A. Andersson and Ali Ahmed) used a correspondence experiment and found evidence of hiring discrimination against transgender people.

Alessandro Graniero

BI Norwegian Business School

Born and raised in Turin, North-West of Italy, where I studied Economics and Finance for five years. After graduating from the University of Turin in 2010, I moved to London to start the PhD in Finance at London Business School. Since the summer of 2016, I have been assistant professor of finance in Oslo at BI Norwegian Business School. My academic interest is in asset pricing theory and, particularly, in macro finance models to study the way individuals form their expectations and how these affect their decisions.

Jan Gravert

University of Wuppertal

Lena Greska

LMU Munich

Lena Greska studied Economics and Japanese Studies at LMU Munich and Oxford University. After completing a research master in 2019, she is now in the 1st year of her PhD studies. As an applied microeconomist, her research interests lie at the intersection of labor economics, political economy and organizational economics.

Alex Grimaud

University of Amsterdam and Catholic University of Milan

I am an economist currently pursuing a PhD in Economics at the Center for Non-Linear Dynamics in Economics and Finance at University of Amsterdam and at the Complexity Lab in Economics at Catholic University of Milan. I am part of the Expectations and Social Influence Dynamics in Economics (ExSIDE) European joint doctorate funded by a Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant from the European Commission under the Horizon 2020 program. My research interests include behavioural macroeconomics, models of learning and expectations, heterogeneity in macroeconomics and New Keynesian models.

Christian Grisse

Swiss National Bank

Christian Grisse obtained his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Cambridge in 2008. From 2008 to 2011 he worked as an economist in the International Research function of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, before joining the SNB in October 2011.

Sebastien Grobon

Ministry of Labor and National Institute for Demographic Studies

I am associated researcher at the National Institute for Demographic Studies and interested in inequality analysis and youth. I currently work for the French Ministry of Labor as a deputy head of a team interested in labour force policy analysis and have been formerly responsible for the National survey on youth resources (ENRJ) at the French National Statistical Institute (Insee). I have also worked on opinions regarding social policies at the Ministry of Social Affairs.

Jakub Growiec

SGH Warsaw School of Economics, Poland

Full Professor at SGH Warsaw School of Economics, Poland. PhD 2007. Conducts research on growth theory, production functions, human and social capital. Author of 28 articles in JCR-listed journals. Presented papers at 47 international conferences and workshops. Believes that the Digital Revolution has de-coupled information communication and processing from the cumulative capacity of human brains, and global information from global GDP – a trend that may culminate in technological singularity.