Home>Paris Trade Seminar with Ina SIMONOVSKA (UC Davis)

01.04.2025

Paris Trade Seminar with Ina SIMONOVSKA (UC Davis)

About this event

01 April 2025 from 14:00 until 15:15

R2-01

48 Boulevard Jourdan (Paris School of Economics), 75014, Paris

Organized by

Department of Economics and PSE
Portrait of Ina Simonovska

Ina Simonovska is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis). She is also a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), a Fellow at CESifo, a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) as well as at the Center for International Price Research (Vanderbilt University), and at the Globalization & Monetary Policy Institute of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Among her editorial duties, she is Associate Editor of the Journal of International Economics, of the Review of International Economics, and member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of Contemporary Economic and Business Issues.

She specializes in international trade, international finance and macroeconomics. Her research interests focus on understanding the sources of welfare gains from international integration. Regularly published in the leading international journals, Ina Simonovska has received a number of teaching and research awards, including the Cheit Award for Excellence in Teaching (Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley) in 2021, the 2016 Bhagwati Award for best paper in 2013-2014 (Journal of International Economics), the Hellman Fellowship (UC Davis), and the Peter B. Kenen Fellowship (Princeton University). 

Ina Simonovska's website

She will present a paper, joint with Bryan Hardy, Felipe E. Saffie, at the next Paris Trade Seminar on the topic:

Trade Credit and Exchange Rate Risk Pass Through (read paper)

The next Paris Trade Seminar will host Catherine THOMAS (LSE) on April 29th.

About this event

01 April 2025 from 14:00 until 15:15

R2-01

48 Boulevard Jourdan (Paris School of Economics), 75014, Paris

Organized by

Department of Economics and PSE