International Macroeconomics in Historical Perspective Workshop | November 28-29
The International Macroeconomics Chair is glad to invite you to a workshop on “International Macroeconomics in Historical Perspective” on November 28-29, 2022.
International Macroeconomics in Historical Perspective
Dates: November 28-29, 2022
Venue: Paris School of Economics
48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, Auditorium
Topic: International capital flows and their consequences for policy making
Organizers: Marianna Astore (PSE), Eric Monnet (PSE & CEPR) and Alain Naef (Banque de France)
Register to the International Macroeconomics in Historical Perspective Workshop via this link (compulsory)
Please note that the deadline for registration for the lunch is November 21st.
Program:
Monday 28th November
13:50 Registration
14:00-15:00 Kirsten Wandschneider (University of Vienna & CEPR)
Low Inflation and the German Bundesbank (with Andrew Jalil, Occidental College)
Discussant: Vincent Bignon (BdF & CEPR)
15:00-16:00 Guillaume Bazot (University Paris 8)
Central banks as shock absorbers in the long run (with Eric Monnet, PSE & CEPR, & Matthias Morys, University of York)
Discussant: Maria Sole Pagliari (Banque de France)
16:00-16:30 Coffee break
16:30-17:30 Kaspar Zimmermann (Leibniz Institute for Financial Research SAFE)
The Shifts and the Shocks: Bank Risk, Leverage, and the Macroeconomy (with Dmitry Kuvshinov and Björn Richter, UPF)
Discussant: Guillaume Vuillemey (HEC & CEPR)
17:30-18:30 1st keynote lecture
Hélène Rey (London Business School & CEPR)
Is This time Different? Financial Follies across centuries
Tuesday 29th November
8:50 Registration
9:00-10:00 Natacha Postel-Vinay (London School of Economics & CEPR)
Hot Money Inflows and Bank Risk-Taking: Germany from the 1920s to the Great Depression (with Stéphanie Collet, Bundesbank)
Discussant: Carsten Burhop (Bonn University)
10:00-11:00 Nuno Palma (University of Manchester & CEPR)
Monetary goldilocks: American precious metals and the Rise of the West (with Yao Chen and Felix Ward, Erasmus School of Economics)
Discussant: François Velde (Chicago Fed)
11:00-11:30 Coffee break
11:30-12:30 Paul Bouscasse (Cambridge University & Sciences Po)
Canst Thou Beggar Thy Neighbour? Evidence from the 1930s
Discussant: Arnaud Mehl (ECB & CEPR)
12:30-13:30 2nd keynote lecture
Catherine Schenk (Oxford University)
Global banking networks in the long run
13:30 Lunch