SCHEDULE

Wednesday, July 2 Morning Session 9:45Opening Address
10:00 Andre Meier (European University Institute), “Do the ”Joneses” really matter? Peer-group vs. correlated effects in consumption”
11:00 Zsolt Sándor (Erasmus University), “Efficient estimation of market equilibrium models”
12:00 Juan Esteban Carranza Romero (Yale University), “Quality formation in durable goods markets”
Lunch 1:00 – 2:30
Afternoon Session 2:30 Fabian Lange (University of Chicago), “The importance of job market signaling in explaining the returns to schooling”
3:30 Eliana Viviano (Tor Vergata University), “A structural matching model to analyse labour markets dynamics”
4:30 Till Von Wachter (University of California, Berkeley), “In the right place at the wrong time - The role of firms and luck in young workers' careers”
Thursday, July 3 Morning Session 10:00 Matthias Schuendeln (Yale University), “Firm dynamics in the presence of credit constraints evidence from a dynamic structural model”
11:00 Dalida Kadyrzhanova (Columbia University), “Financial constraint and the dynamics of an imperfectly competitive industries”
12:00 Gergely Csorba (Central European University), “Discrimination in present of positive  network effects”
Lunch 1:00 – 2:30
Afternoon Session 2:30 Libor Dusek (University of Chicago), “Visibility of taxes and the size of government”
3:30 Andrea Mattozzi (University of Pennsylvania), “Voting over redistribution: the role of electoral markets”
4:30 Alessandro Riboni (University of Rochester), “Time consistency in dynamic bargaining: the role of committees as substitutes for commitment”
Friday, July 4 Morning Session 10:00 Nicola Fuchs Schundeln (Yale University), “Precautionary saving and self-selection evidence from German reunification experiment”
11:00 Melanie Lüehrmann (University of Mannheim), “How aging affects the consumption structure”
12:00 Irina Cojuharenco (Universitat Pompeu Fabra), “Past and future in sequences: what best predicts remembered and anticipated utility?”
Lunch 1:00 – 2:30
Afternoon Session 2:30 Adam Szeidl (Harvard University), “Existence of equilibrium in large double auctions”
3:30 Han Ozsoylev (University of Minnesota), “Knowing thy neighbor: rational expectations and social interaction in financial markets”

Push here to return to the main page