Giulia CAPRINI (Oxford)

Job Talk - Jan 9th
  • Drawing of a lecturer presenting work to studentsDrawing of a lecturer presenting work to students

Giulia Caprini

Giulia CAPRINI is a Prize Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Nuffield College (Oxford University). She holds a PhD in Economics (2022) from the European University Institute (EUI).

She will present a paper on the topic:
Visual Bias (read paper)

Research fields:
Political Economy
Health Economics
Behavioural Economics
Cognitive Economics

More about Giulia CAPRINI and her research

Date: TUESDAY, January 9th - 12.30 pm
Location:
Department of Economics - 4th floor - Salle Jean-Paul Fitoussi (H 405)

TRIBUTE

The department of economics is immensely sad to announce the death of Philippe Martin.
  • Philippe Martin (credit photo Jean Claude Guilloux/ Sciences Po)Philippe Martin (credit photo Jean Claude Guilloux/ Sciences Po)

The Economics Department at Sciences Po owes its existence largely to Philippe. 

He was the first chair from 2008 to 2013, and his communicative energy convinced people to join him in what might have seemed like a risky adventure at first. He laid the groundwork by setting up a master’s and doctoral programme, recruiting many young international researchers, and establishing the rules that guarantee the efficient functioning of an academic unit. Mixing the best international practices with a certain creativity in the design of the department, he ensured that our reputation would grow very quickly. All this was done while maintaining the original spirit of building a powerful but friendly group.

Although he went on to other adventures, in the cabinet of the Ministry of Finance, then at the Conseil d'Analyse Économique, as Vice-president of Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), and most recently as Dean of the École d'Affaires Publiques at Sciences Po and on the Board of the Fondation nationale des sciences politiques (FNSP), he remained very attached to the Department and always had an influential and insightful voice. While brilliantly assuming high-level responsibilities, Philippe continued to conduct high-level academic research. He argued that economic research is less interesting without economic policy application, but conversely that the practice of economic policy in isolation from research runs the risk of gradual irrelevance. Many students will also remember him as a brilliant teacher. Throughout those years, Philippe never stopped teaching, including to very large audiences at Sciences Po, with a rare talent for making students understand how useful economics can be to decipher and act on complex real-world problems. He knew he could move on to other projects with confidence that the foundations he had laid would allow the department to continue to flourish.

We will miss Philippe terribly, as a colleague and as a friend. Philippe had immense personal qualities. He could formulate frank critical statements, but never in a mean way, always morally impeccable. He left us much too soon. We will try to nurture the gift he has given us in the years to come.

Read Sciences Po's tribute
A Book of condolences is available to you Sciences Po's Direction générale, at 27 rue Saint-Guillaume (1st floor). You can also send your messages to direction.generale@sciencespo.fr

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Friday Seminar - Dec 15th

  • Paper in a typewriter on which it is written "New Research"Paper in a typewriter on which it is written "New Research"

Naomi Cohen

Naomi COHEN is a PhD Candidate in Economics at Sciences Po working on a thesis entitled Understanding Macroeconomic Imbalances and Spillover Effects in the Euro Area Using a Two Country HANK Model under the supervision of Xavier RAGOT.

Naomi COHEN will present a paper at the next Friday Seminar on the topic:

European Risk Sharing and Inequality Transmission

More about Naomi COHEN and her research

 

Claire Montialoux

Claire MONTIALOUX is a CNRS Assistant Professor at the Department since 2023. She joined us from the Goldman School of Public Policy of the University of California at Berkeley (UC Berkeley). She is also a Faculty Affiliate at the Opportunity Lab (UC Berkeley) as well as at the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment - IRLE (UC Berkeley).

She is a labour economist studying how labour market policies and institutions affect wage inequality, in a global and historical perspective. Her research has already garnered important recognition: her PhD dissertation was awarded the W.E. Upjohn Institute Award in 2020, and both the Opportunity Lab and IRLE bestowed on her awards in 2020 and 2022. She was given a substantial WorkRise grant by the Urban Institute for her project with Ellora Derenoncourt How Does Federal and State Wage and Employment Policy Shape Racial Disparities in Earnings and Economic Mobility?

Claire Montialoux will present a paper, joint with Sebastian Otero and Roberto Hsu Rocha, at the next Friday Seminar on the topic:

Does equalizing school funding equalize labor market outcomes? Evidence from Brazil (read abstract, PDF 127.85 KB)

More about Claire MONTIALOUX and her research

Date: FRIDAY, December 15th - 12:30 PM
Location: Department of Economics - 4th floor - Salle Jean-Paul Fitoussi (H 405)

This is our last Friday Seminar before the holidays: we look forward to seeing you again during the Winter/Spring Semester in 2024!

Structural Seminar - Dec 12th

  • Vector gear infographic elementsVector gear infographic elements

Giulia Brancaccio

Giulia BRANCACCIO is Assistant Professor of Economics at New York University's Stern School of Business since 2021. Prior to joining Stern, she was Assistant Professor at Cornell University. She is also also a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and a Research Affiliate at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR).

Her research focuses on industrial organisation. In her work, she combines theoretical and empirical analysis to examine the functioning and failures of decentralized markets, ranging from bond markets to transportation. Her research has been awarded a number of National Science Foundation (NSF) grants. In 2022, she was the recipient of the Econometric Society's Frisch Medal for the best applied (empirical or theoretical) paper published in Econometrica during the previous four years. More recently she was awarded the Yuki Arai Faculty Research Prize at NYU Stern. 

 Giulia Brancaccio will present a paper, joint with Myrto Kalouptsidi and Theo Papageorgiou, at the next Structural Seminar on the topic:

Investment in Infrastructure and Trade: The Case of Ports (read abstract, PDF 59.48 KB)

More about Giulia BRANCACCIO and her research

Date: TUESDAY, December 12th - 3.15 pm
Location: Department of Economics - 4th floor - Salle Jean-Paul Fitoussi (H 405)

This is our last Structural Seminar before the holidays: we look forward to seeing again during the Winter/Spring Semester in 2024!

Adapting to a riskier and more fragmented world - Dec 11 & 12th

6th FirmOrgDyn Joint Research Conference
  • Drawer of file folders indicating conferences, papers, abstractsDrawer of file folders indicating conferences, papers, abstracts

Logos of Banca d'Italia, Banque de France, Sciences Po, EIFE and CEPR

The Banca d’Italia, the Banque de France, as part of its partnership with Sciences Po, and the Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance (EIEF), in cooperation with the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), will be holding their sixth joint research conference on trends in firm financing, firm organisation and firm dynamics.

The conference aims to create a forum for discussion on issues related to the recent patterns of firms’ activity, the organisation of production and financing decision, as well as their determinants, consequences and implications for policymaking.

The conference will take place in Rome, at the Banca d'Italia (link to conference webpage), December 11th and 12th, 2023.

This year’s conference welcomes contributions investigating how firms are adapting to a riskier and more fragmented world:

  • to the ecological and energy transitions 
  • to the impact of energy shocks and green innovation
  • to the international transmission of shocks

Download the detailed programme (PDF 858.94 KB)

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