
Paris School of Economics
Address: 48 boulevard jourdan 75014 Paris
Location 48 Boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, France
Location Daniel Cohen Amphitheater
Presence On site
Hourly –
8:45 – Welcome coffee
9:00-9:45 – Morgane Richard (University College London)
The Spatial and Distributive Implications of Working-from-home: A General Equilibrium Model
9:45-10:30 – Xincheng Qiu (Arizona State University), Moritz Kuhn, Iourii Manovskii
Female Labor Force Participation and Structural Transformation
10:30-11:00- Coffee break
11:00-11:45 – Alexander Ludwig (Goethe University Frankfurt), Leon Huetsch, Dirk Krueger
The Medical Expansion, Life-Expectancy and Endogenous Directed Technical Change
11:45-12:30 – Rana Sajedi (Bank of England), Ambrogio Cesa-Bianchi, R. Harrison
Decomposing the Drivers of Global R∗
12:30-13:30 – Lunch break
13:30-14:15 – Elisa Giannone (CREI), Shoumitro Chatterjee, Kan Kuno
Unequal Global Convergence
14:15-15:00 – João G. Oliveira (Nova SBE), Pedro Brinca, Hans A. Holter
Technological Change and Earnings Inequality in the U.S.: Implications for Optimal Taxation
15:00-15:30 – Coffee break
15:30-16:15 – Joseba Martinez (London Business School)
The dynamic effects of income taxes in a world of ideas
16:15-17:15 – Keynote: Chad Jones (Stanford University)
The A.I. Dilemma: Growth versus Existential Risk
8:45 – Welcome coffee
9:00-9:45 – Omar Rachedi (Esade Business School), Henrique S. Basso
Robot adoption and inflation dynamics
9:45-10:30 – Martin Wolf (Universität St. Gallen), Luca Formaro
Monetary Policy in the Age of Automation
10:30-11:00 – Coffee break
11:00-12:00 – Keynote: Natalia Ramondo (Boston University)
The carbon footprint of multinational production
12:00-13:00 – Lunch break
13:00-13:45 – Tim Willems (Bank of England), Paolo Cavallino (BIS), Paul Beaudry
A wealth-centric model of monetary policy
13:45-14:30 – Ricardo Zago (Banque de France), Daniele Siena
Labor Market Fluidity and the Flattening of the Phillips Curve
14:30-15:00 – Coffee break
15:00-16:00 – Policy panel: “Structural change – implications and challenges for monetary policy”
16:00-16:15 – Coffee break
16:15-17:00 – Christian Probsting (KU Leuven)
A putty-clay model to evaluate the aggregate and distributional effects of a carbon tax
17:00-17:45 – Hernan Daniel Seoane Bernadaz (Universidad Carlos III Madrid), Florencia S. Airaudo, Evi Pappa
The green metamorphosis of a small open economy
Organizers:
Tobias Broer (Paris School of Economics, University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Institute for International Economic Studies, CEPR)
Juan Carluccio (Banque de France, University of Surrey)
Riccardo Cioffi (Paris School of Economics)
Axelle Ferriere (Paris School of Economics, CNRS, CEPR)
Gilles Saint-Paul (Paris School of Economics, École normale supérieure – PSL, CEPR)
The International Macroeconomics Chair is the result of a partnership between the Banque de France and PSE. Sharing the same vision about scientific needs on international issues, these two organisations joint their efforts to build a chair with the objective of fostering the development of research on the financial & monetary international system, and in international Macroeconomics.
The Macroeconomic Risk Chair aims to promote the development and dissemination of research into a number of areas linked to the issue of macroeconomic risk, the macroeconomic effects of uncertainty, the financial and macroeconomic contagion effects of crises and the long-term risks.
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Address: 48 boulevard jourdan 75014 Paris