Speakers

On job market

Eduard Suari-Andreu

Leiden University & Netspar

I am a post-doctoral researcher at the Economics Department of Leiden University. I conduct research within the broad field of applied microeconomics, with a special focus on the economics of aging, household finance, and migration.

Arjunan Subramanian

Glasgow University

Arjunan Subramanian is Associate Professor in Economics at the Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow, UK. Previously he held positions at the Warwick University, University of Gottingen, Centre for Development Research (ZEF), University of Bonn and at the National Council of Applied Economic Research in New Delhi, India. He received the Research Medal for Outstanding Research on Development the Global Development Network and the Award for Outstanding Journal Article in Review of Agricultural Economics by American Agricultural Economics Association. Apart from publishing in top development journals, he has also published in journals with strong policy impact.

Sigrid Suetens

Tilburg University

Sigrid Suetens is Professor at the Department of Economics of Tilburg University. Her current research focuses on ethnic discrimination (e.g., elicitation of taste-based discrimination, effect of contact with ethnic minorities) and on understanding for cooperation in repeated dilemma games (e.g., strategic versus non-strategic motives, role of strategic environment).

Tomasz Sulka

DICE, University of Düsseldorf

After receiving my PhD from the University of Edinburgh in 2019, I joined University of Düsseldorf as a Postdoc. My research interests are at the intersection of Applied Theory, Behavioural Economics, and Household Finance.

Junze Sun

European University Institute

I am Junze Sun, currently a Max Weber Postdoctoral Fellow at the European University Institute (EUI), under the mentoring of Prof. David K. Levine. I obtained my PhD in Economics at CREED, University of Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute, under supervision of Prof. Arthur Schram and Prof. Randolph Sloof. My research interests lie broadly in political economics, micro-economic theory, and behavioral and experimental economics.

Chen Sun

Humboldt University Berlin

I am a research associate in Economics at Humboldt University Berlin. My research interests lie in behavioral and experimental economics, in particular, in individual decision-making and learning. I obtained my PhD degree in Economcis from Tilburg University in 2018.

Yiman Sun

Toulouse School of Economics

Yiman Sun is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Toulouse School of Economics. He received his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Texas at Austin in 2019. His research interests are microeconomic theory, game theory, and political economy, with a focus on learning, dynamic games, and the economics of information.

Chuanping Sun

School of Economics and Finance Queen Mary University of London

I am a PhD candidate in Economics and I am going to the Job Market this year. My research area spans between financial econometrics and empirical asset pricing. In my Job Market Paper, I aimed to dissect the factor zoo while taking account of high correlations in high dimensionality, which sheds light on a new perspective of the “factor zoo enigma”. My other papers develop econometric theories of a LASSO-related estimator under more general conditions (weak correlations and fat tails) and explore portfolio optimization problems, etc. More details of my research/CV can be found in my personal webpage.

Tiancheng Sun

London School of Economics

Tiancheng Sun is a Ph.D. candidate in Economics at the London School of Economics. He is interested in macroeconomics, especially in business cycles. He will be joining the School of Economics at the University of Edinburgh as a lecturer in the coming 2020-2021 academic year.

Khushboo Surana

University of York

Khushboo Surana is a lecturer at the University of York. She pursued a Ph.D. in Economics at KU Leuven, where her research was supervised by Professor Laurens Cherchye. Her research focuses on the application of nonparametric methods to better understand household consumption choices. More specifically, she uses revealed preference techniques to learn about consumer preferences from their consumption and labor supply decisions.