Speakers

On job market

Miguel Ortiz-Serrano

University of Sussex

Postodoctoral scholar at University of Sussex. Specialised in French financial history and the analysis of financial markets.
Currently opening new paths of research in the relationship between financial openness and pandemic diseases.

Kjersti Østbakken

Institute for Social Research

Kjersti Misje Østbakken has a PhD in Economics from University of Oslo (2013). In her current research she analyses the changing skills- and health requirements in the labor market, the ongiong changes in atypical work and gender differences in labour market outcomes.

Sebastian Ottinger

UCLA

Difei Ouyang

University of Geneva

I am currently a PhD candidate in Economics in Institute of Economics and Econometrics at University of Geneva. My research interests include Development Economics, International Trade, Resource Misallocation, and Chinese Economy.

Tolga Özden

University of Amsterdam

Tolga Özden is a PhD candidate at the University of Amsterdam, the econometrics department. His main fields of research are time series econometrics and DSGE modelling with a focus on expectation dynamics. During his PhD, he worked on various monetary and macroprudential policy topics in collaboration with the National Bank of Belgium, De Nederlandsche Bank and the Bank of England. More information about his research projects and interests can be found on his personal webpage www.tolgaozden.net.

Marco Paccagnella

OECD

I am currently an analyst in the OECD Directorate for Education and Skills, where he have worked on PIAAC (the Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies) for the past six years. Before joining the OECD, I was an economist at the Bank of Italy for five years. My research interests are in labour economics and in the economics of education. I am currently working on age rank effects, the evolution of gender gaps in cognitive skills over students' school years, and on how log files can complement information from standardised assessments. I hold a PhD in Economics from Bocconi University and a MSc in Economics from the LSE.

Alessia Paccagnini

University College Dublin

I am currently a tenured academic at the University College Dublin School of Business and a research associate at CAMA. In my career, I have several research and teaching positions at: Bicocca Univesity, EUI, ECB, University of Pennsylvania, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Bank of England, National Bank of Poland, IMT Lucca, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, and Bocconi University where I earned my Ph.D.. My research includes Macroeconometrics, Forecasting, and Applied Macroeconomics. I am currently editor of the open-access international peer-review journal, Forecasting.

Davide Domenico Pace

Univerisity of Amsterdam - CREED

My research field is Behavioral Economics with a focus on motivated beliefs and sustainable consumption.
I am a PhD candidate at CREED the Center for Research in Experimental Economics and Political Decision Making of the University of Amsterdam under the supervision of Joël van der Weele.

Elisa Palagi

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

Elisa Palagi is an Italian-Norwegian third year Ph.D. student in Economics at Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa, Italy. Her research is focused on income inequality, and it is both empirical and theoretical. She is currently working on identifying potential determinants for rising personal income inequality, with a particular focus on the functional distribution of income and climate change. She is also investigating impacts on macroeconomic dynamics of increased disparities, through the use of agent based modeling.

Tereza Palanská

Charles University, Prague

Tereza Palanská is a Ph.D. candidate and researcher at Charles University, Prague, and an external consultant for World Bank. She has obtained her Master's degree in Economics at Charles University and a second Master's degree in Econometrics at Aix-Marseille School of Economics, France. In her research, she focuses on transfer pricing-related profit shifting and the effects of financial secrecy on cross-border financial assets.