Speakers

On job market

Flavio Toxvaerd

University of Cambridge

Dr Flavio Toxvaerd is a University Lecturer at the Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge. He specialises in the economics of infectious diseases and industrial organisation. He is an Associate Editor of the European Economic Review and a member of the Academic Panel of the Competition and Markets Authority. He has also served as a Senior Economic Advisor to the Independent Review on Antimicrobial Resistance (set up by HM Government and the Wellcome Trust)

Mark Trede

University of Münster

Professor of Econometrics

Egon Tripodi

University of Essex

Egon Tripodi just started as Lecturer at the University of Essex. His research on social influence aims to shed light on the role of identity in shaping individual behavior, the implications of our desire to impress others, and the origins of biased beliefs.

Johannes Trunzer

Leibniz University Hannover

Since January 2019, I am a doctoral student of economics at Leibniz University Hannover. Previously, I studied economic geography (M.A.) at Leibniz University Hannover and geography (B.Sc.) at Heidelberg University and Stockholm University. My research interests focus on labor economics, economics of education and regional economics. In my dissertation, I work on the effects of the Bologna Process and the educational expansion on labor market returns of university graduates.

Jeanne Tschopp

University of Bern

Jeanne Tschopp is an Assistant Professor at the University of Bern. Her research involves understanding how labor market frictions and the structure of wage formation impact the functioning of labor markets. Currently, she focuses on the demand side of the labor market, and in particular, on the implications of search and bargaining mechanisms for local labor market outcomes, trade incentives and firms’ labor demand decisions in Germany and the US. She is also particularly interested in the effect of technological change on wage inequality across firms.

Andrea Tulli

University of Warwick

I am an applied microeconomist who specializes in public economics. In my research, I evaluate the effect of different policies on Italian municipalities, with a particular focus on public procurement and municipal expenditure. In my work, I explore questions such as the effect of anti-corruption policies aimed at one municipal government on the behaviour of neighbouring municipalities, or the effect of greater fiscal decentralization on public budgetary decision. Finally, in my most recent work I study the link between fiscal rules and the effectiveness of procurement spending of the Italian municipalities. I complete my PhD in Economics at the University of Warwick. In the Fall 2020, I will join the University of Tübingen as Assistant Professor in Public Economics.

Bertil Tungodden

Norwegian School of Economics

Bertil Tungodden is a professor of economics at the Department of Economics at NHH Norwegian School of Economics. He is the director of the research center FAIR and co-director of the research group The Choice Lab and . One of his main research fields are experimental economics and behavioral economics, with a focus on economic inequality and fairness.

Camélia Turcu

University of Orléans - LEO CNRS

Camélia Turcu is a Professor of Economics at the University of Orléans (France) and a research fellow at LEO CNRS. She is the co-director of the LEO research team, International Economics and Sustainable Development. Since 2015, Camélia has been the Chair of INFER (International Network For Economic Research), coordinating the INFER research activities and representing the network worldwide. She has published numerous articles in peer-reviewed international journals and several book chapters. Her research areas include international (macro)economics and resource economics.

Ashish Tyagi

Frankfurt School of Finance & Management

Ashish Tyagi is a Post-Doctoral Researcher at the Frankfurt School of Finance & Management under the Robert Bosch Foundation’s research project on the design of climate and energy policy instruments in emerging and developing economies. In 2017, he finished his Ph.D from Penn State University. His research focuses on Environmental, Resource and Energy Economics. He is interested in climate and energy policies, especially in developing economies and the conflict between economic development, sustainability and institutions.

Björn Tyrefors

Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN)

Björn Tyrefors, is a researcher at the Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN) and partly at the Department of Economics at Stockholm University. He received his PhD from the Stockholm School of Economics in December 2007. His research areas of interest are in Political and Labor Economics. His dissertation work focused on how institutions shape policy using quasi-experimental methods. He is currently working on projects dealing with political economics, discrimination, education, integration and economics of crime.