Conferences and seminars

Each year, the IIES invites prominent researchers from all over the world, to hold seminars in our Seminar Series.

IIES Seminars usually take place on Tuesdays at 13.00 and Thursdays at 10.00 in room A822 (the IIES Seminar Room), unless otherwise stated. The seminars are in person with an option to join via Zoom and run for 90 minutes including questions. For more information contact IIES Seminar Series Administrator Ulrika Gålnander: ulrika.galnander@iies.su.se

IIES/SNS International Policy Talks is a collaboration with the Centre for Business and Policy Studies (SNS) where the mission is to bring insights from leading international economists to the Swedish policy debate. These talks are hosted by the SNS and require prior registration via their website. 

Subscribe to seminars using Google Calendar.

 

Seminars: Fall 2023

Below you will find lists of upcoming seminars and events at the IIES.

Tuesday 29 August at 13.00

Oleg Itskhoki, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
Title: Optimal Exchange Rate Policy

Thursday 31 August at 10.00

Kjetil Storesletten, University of Minnesota
Title: Serial entrepreneurship in China

Tuesday 5 September at 13.00

Kilian Huber, Chicago Booth School of Business
Title: Corporate Discount Rate with Niels Joachim Gormsen

Thursday 7 September at 10.00

Alessandra Fenizia, George Washington University
Title: Data-Driven Management Intervention in Vocational Schools in Greece, with Renata Lemos and Ioanna Pantelaiou.

Tuesday 12 September at 13.00

Joana Naritomi, LSE
Title: Cash Transfers and the Local Economy: Evidence from Brazil

Thursday 14 September at 13.00 N.B TIME!

Francois Gerard, Queen Mary's University of London
Title: Job displacement insurance in a lower-income country: Evidence From a Field Experiment in Ethiopia

Tuesday 19 September at 13.00

Arizo Karimi, Uppsala University
Title: Understanding Intimate Partner Violence Victimization & Perpetration: Risk Factors, Consequences, and Policy Implications, with Hanna Mühlrad, Susan Niknami, Petra Ornstein, and Anna Sandberg Trolle-Lindgren.

Thursday 21 September at 10.00

José Vásquez, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)
Title: The Gains from Foreign Multinationals in an Economy with Distortions

Tuesday 26 September at 13.00

Giacomo de Giorgi, University of Geneva
Title: Farmers to Entrepreneurs

Thursday 28 September at 10.00

Joseph Zeira, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Title: Automation and Unemployment: Help is on the Way

Friday 29 September at 13.00 N.B! Day and Time!

Sevi Rodrigez Mora, University of Edinburgh and CEPR
Title: National Accounts in a World of Naturally Occurring Data:A Proof of Concept for Consumption

Tuesday 3 October at 13.00

Virginia Minni, Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS)
Title: Meaning at work, with Nava Ashraf, Oriana Bandiera and Luigi Zingales.

Thursday 5 October at 10.00

Gerard Padró i Miquel, Yale University
Title: Competitive Capture of Public Opinion, with Ricardo Alonso

Thursday 12 October at 10.00

Erika Deserranno, Bocconi University
Title: TBA

Tuesday 17 October at 13.00

Christopher A. Neilson, Yale University
Title: TBA

Thursday 19 October at 10.00

Jane Olmstead-Rumsey, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)
Title: TBA

Tuesday 24 October at 13.00

Natalie Bau, UCLA
Title: TBA

Thursday 26 October at 10.00

David Baquaee, UCLA
Title: TBA

Tuesday 7 November at 13.00

Federico Kochen, CEMFI
Title: TBA

Tuesday 14 November at 13.00

Bertil Tungodden, NHH Norwegian School of Economics
Title: TBA

Thursday 16 November at 10.00

Antoine Bertheau, NHH Norwegian School of Economics
Title: TBA

Tuesday 21 November at 13.00

Adam Kapor, Princeton University
Title: TBA

Thursday 23 November at 10.00

Gabriel Ulyssea, University College London (UCL)
Title: TBA

Tuesday 28 November at 13.00

Anubhav Jha, Princeton University
Title: TBA

Thursday 30 November at 10.00

Florian Trouvain, Princeton University
Title: TBA

Friday 29 September at 9.00

Joseph Zeira, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Title: The Economic Costs of Conflicts

 

 

Seminars: Spring 2023

Here you can find the previous semester's Job Talks, Seminars in the IIES Seminar Series, IIES/SNS International Policy Talks and Defenses.

Friday 13 January at 10.00

Pauline Carry, CREST
Title: The Effects of the Legal Minimum Working Time on Workers, Firms and the Labor Market

Monday 16 January at 10.00

Eleanor Wiseman, University of California, Berkeley
Title: Border Trade and Information Frictions: Evidence from Informal Traders in Kenya

Wednesday 18 January at 09.30

Sara Casella, University of Pennsylvania
Title: Women's Labor Force Participation and the Business Cycle

Thursday 19 January at 10.00

Kai-Jie Wu, University of Rochester
Title: The Rise of Specialized Firms

Monday 25 January at 13.30

Mikko Silliman, Harvard University
Title: Childcare, social skills, and the labor market

Thursday 26 January at 10.00

Marta Morazzoni, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Title: Student Debt and Entrepreneurship in the US

Friday 27 January at 10.00

Suzanna Khalifa, Aix-Marseille Université
Title: Female Genital Cutting and Bride Price

Wednesday 1 February at 09.30

Filip Babalievsky, University of Minnesota
Title: Misallocation in the Market for Inventors

Monday 6 February at 10.00

Xincheng Qiu, University of Pennsylvania
Title: Vacant Jobs

Tuesday 7 February at 10.00

Brian Higgins, Stanford University
Title: Racial Segmentation in the US Housing Market

Thursday 9 March at 10.00

Christian Wolf, MIT
Title: Can Deficits Finance Themselves? with George-Marios Angeletos and Chen Lian

Thursday 16 March at 10.00

David Argente, Penn State University
Title: Strategic Complementarities in a Dynamic Model of Technology Adoption: P2P Digital Payments, with Fernando Alvarez, Francesco Lippi, Esteban Mendez and Diana Van Patten

Tuesday 21 March at 13.00

Thomas Drechsel, UMD
Title: Income Inequality and Job Creation with Sebastian Doerr and Donggyu Lee

Thursday 23 March at 10.00

Dean Karlan, Northwestern University
Title: Psychosocial Constraints and Social Protection: Evidence from Studies New, Old, Borrowed, and Blue (but Some Happy Too) 

Tuesday 28 March at 13.00

Nicola Limodio, Bocconi University
Title: Mobile Money, Interoperability and Financial Inclusion

Thursday  30 March at 10.00

Anna Vitali, UCL
Title: Consumer search and firm location: Theory and Evidence from the garment sector in Uganda

Tuesday 4 April at 13.00

Tommy Andersson, Lund University
Title: A General Non-Manipulable Matching Mechanism for Markets with One-sided Preferences

Tuesday 18 April at 13.00

Corina Boar, NYU
Title: Nonlinear Inflation Dynamics in Menu Cost Economies, with Andres Blanco, Callum Jones, Virgiliu Midrigan

Tuesday 25 April at 13.00

Gordon Dahl, UCSD
Title: On the Formation of In-group Bias: The Role of Peer Group Diversity and Cultural Distance, with Dan Anderberg, Christina Felfe, Helmut Rainer and Thomas Siedler

Thursday 27 April at 10.00

Rebecca Dizon-Ross, Chicago Booth School of Business
Title: Mechanism design for personalized policy: A field experiment incentivizing behavior change, with Ariel Zucker

Tuesday 2 May at 13.00

Ludwig Straub, Harvard University
Title: Disaggregated Economic Accounts, with Asger Andersen, Emil Toft Hansen, Kilian Huber and Niels Johannesen

Thursday 4 May at 10.00

Edwin Leuven, University of Oslo
Title: College admission as a screening and sorting device, with Mikkel Gandil

Tuesday 9 May at 13.00

Doug Gollin, University of Oxford
Title: The Long-Run Development Impacts of Agricultural Productivity Gains: Evidence from Irrigation Canals in India, with Sam Asher, Ali Campion, and Paul Novosad

Thursday 11 May at 10.00

Alison Andrew, University of Oxford
Title: Gender Norms, Violence and Adolescent Girls' Trajectories: Evidence from a Field Experiment in India

Tuesday 16 May at 13.00

Luca Fornaro, CREI
Title: Monetary Policy during Unbalanced Global Recoveries, with Federica Romei

Tuesday 23 May at 10.15 

Adrien Bilal, Harvard University
Title: Anticipating Climate Change Across the United States, with Esteban Rossi-Hansberg

Thursday 25 May at 10.00

Mauricio Romero, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM)
Title: The incidence of affirmative action: Evidence from quotas in private schools in India

Tuesday 30 May at 13.00

Mitchell Hoffman, University of Toronto Rotman School of Management
Title: Is This Really Kneaded? Identifying and Eliminating Potentially Harmful Monitoring Practices, with Guido Friebel, Matthias Heinz, Tobias Kretschmer and Nick Zubanov

Wednesday 17 May at 11.30-12.30

Luca Fornaro, CREI
Title: Why did global inflation rise? How is inflation transmitted across countries? Do we need international monetary policy cooperation?

 

Wednesday 24 May at 13.00

Mattias Almgren
Title: Essays on Home Production, Mobility, and Monetary Policy
Opponent: Almut Balleer, RWTH University Aachen 

Wednesday 31 May at 9.00

Claire Thürwächter
Title: Essays on Macroeconomics, Monetary Policy and Firm Heterogeneity
Opponent: Mathias Klein, Sveriges Riksbank

Thursday 1 June at 10.00

Tillmann von Carnap
Title: Markets and marketplaces: Essays on access and transformation in remote rural economies
Opponent: Samuel Asher, Imperial College London

Friday 2 June at 9.00

Markus Peters
Title: Essays on Savings Behavior, Inflation Measurement, and Growth
Opponent: Tobias Laun, Konjunktursinstitutet (Macroeconomic Research and Simulations Division, National Institute of Economic Research)

Thursday 8 June at 10.00

Francesco Loiacono
Title: Firms and Labor Markets: Essays in Development Economics
Opponent:  Simon Quinn, University of Oxford

Tuesday 13 June at 13.00

Sebastian Tebbe
Title: Externalities and Coordination Failures
Opponent: Ulrich Wagner, University of Mannheim

Wednesday 14 June at 13.00

Gualtiero Azzalini
Title:Essays on Income Risk, Portfolio Choices and the Macroeconomy
Opponent: Alexander Michaelides, Imperial College London

Thursday 15 June at 13.00

Markus Kondziella
Title: Essays on Economic Growth, Inflation and Inequality,
Opponent: Caroline Villegas Sanchez, ESADE Business School

 

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