Doctorissimes 2025

Colloque

Ajouter à mon calendrier

Lieu 48 Boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, France

Présence Sur place

Horaires

Paris School of Economics a le plaisir de vous inviter à la vingtième conférence des Doctorissimes.

Programme

08:30-09:00 – Accueil (retrait des badges) – Hall PSE

09:00-10:00 – Keynote: François Libois (PSE, INRAE) – Community Forest Management: Unveiling the Success Story of Nepal

10:00-10:45 – Pause café et séance de posters – Hall PSE

10:45-12:45Session 1 : 3 sessions parallèles :

  • Education and Family
    • Andrea Cornejo (PSE) – The more languages the merrier?: Peer effects on language acquisition for migrant students
      Discussant: Nina Guyon (PSE, ENS)
    • Iris Stornik (University of Bonn) – Expected Returns to Parenting Styles: Perceived Impacts on Educational Outcomes, Mental Health, and Self-Worth
      Discussant: Louis Fréget (CEPREMAP)
    • Arthur Pellenq (University of Illinois, Chicago) – The Effect of the Homogenization of Higher Education Systems on Student Immigration Flows
      Discussant: Liam Wren-Lewis (PSE, INRAE)
  • Political Economics and History
    • Demilly David (Banque de France, CRED) – An illusory feeling of stability: bank failures in France in the 1920s.
      Discussant: Eric Monnet (PSE, EHESS)
    • Lorenzo Maria Casale (University of Z¨urich) – Family Mayors: Undermined Accountability in Italian Municipalities
      Discussant: Philine Widmer (PSE)
    • Maxence Castiello (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) – Spread the Word: Mass Media, Language and Propaganda in Fascist Italy
      Discussant: Thomas Renault (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CES)
  • Environmental Economics
    • Jeanne Astier (CREST – IP Paris) – Climate induced Congestion in Ports: General Equilibrium Consequences on Transportation and Trade
      Discussant: Matthew Gordon (PSE)
    • Hubert Massoni (University of Bologna) – Climate Trade Costs
      Discussant: Hélène Ollivier (PSE, CNRS)

12:45-14:00 – Déjeuner (Hall PSE)

14:00-15:00 – Keynote: Emmanuelle Auriol (TSE) – Faith-Based Organisations as Platforms

15:00-16:30 Session 2 : 2 sessions parallèles :

  • Microeconomic Theory
    • Quan Li (University of Cambridge) – Digital Market for Lemons
      Discussant: Nikhil Vellodi (PSE)
    • Ivan Conjeaud (PSE) – Algorithmic collusion under competitive design
      Discussant: Antoine Mandel (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CES, PSE)
  • Experimental Economics
    • Lily Savey (PSE, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne:) – How to win votes and influence strategic voters
      Discussant: Liza Charroin (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CES)
    • Giacomo Gallegati (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, University of Turin) – Judging the paper by its cover: affiliation bias in conference admissions
      Discussant: Nicolas Jacquemet (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CES, PSE)

16:30-17:15 – Pause café et séance de posters – Hall PSE

17:15-18:45Session 3 : 2 sessions parallèles :

  • Inequality
    • Rafael de la Vega (UNU-MERIT) – Economic structure and top earnings inequality in South Africa: A firm-level and sectoral perspective
      Discussant: TBC
    • Maria Valentina Gabrielli (PSE, ENPC) – Intergenerational Mobility: Exploring New Evidence for Latin America
      Discussant: Louis Sirugue (LSE)
  • Taxation
    • Paul-Emmanuel Chouc (CREST – IP Paris) – Multinational Activity and the Global Minimum Tax
      Discussant: Sébastien Laffitte (CY Cergy Paris University, EU Tax Observatory)
    • Davi Bhering (PSE) – How Do Firms Respond to an Offshore Tax Amnesty? Evidence from Brazil
      Discussant: Matt Collin (EU Tax Observatory)

Poster Sessions :

  • Séance du matin (10:00-10:45)
    • Daniel Evans (University of Bonn) – Predicting Social Science results
    • Beatriz Hernández Melián (PSE) – The effect of climate salient events on local public finance
    • Antonio Leon (Queen Mary University of London, PSE) – Superstar Firms, Social Mobility, and Elections
    • Ignacio Leon Nina (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) – The Criminal Trap of Education: Low School Attendance and Developed Organized Crime
    • Beatriz Rache (UCLA) – Delivering Change: The Educational and Labor Market Effects of Gig Work
    • Davide Sansone (Sciences Po) – Come Rain or Shine
  • Séance du soir (16:30-17:15)
    • Fausto Libero Barberis (Sapienza University of Rome) – Expenditure, Income Variability and Heterogeneity: Evidence from Italian Household Data
    • Clémentine Bouleau (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CES, PSE) – The Cost of Rejection: Understanding Gender Dynamics in Leadership Aspirations
    • Yuki Kanayama (LSE)Option value, empty homes, and disamenity effect
    • Elliot Motte (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) – Insult Politics in the Age of Social Media
    • Simon Muchardt (Université Paris-Dauphine, University of Copenhagen) – Tax Incentives or Political Motivations? Evidence from Corporate Contributions
    • Thomas Pelloquin (EHESP – University of Rennes, PSE) – Revisiting the Causal Impact of Response Time on Health Outcomes: a Non-Parametric Estimation Using Air Temperature as an IV, Health
    • Moritz Scheidenberger (PSE) – Uncertainty Shocks and the Labor Market

09:00-11:00Session 4 : 2 sessions parallèles :

  • Macroeconomic Models
    • Naomi Cohen (Sciences Po) – International risk-sharing and inequality transmission: an application to the Euro Area
      Discussant: Edouard Challe (PSE, CNRS)
    • Matteo Cremonini (Bocconi University) – Wealth tax, entrepreneurship, market power
      Discussant: Tobias Broer (PSE, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
    • Marina Hoch (University of Mannheim) – Bailing out homeowners: Disaster aid and mortgage default after natural disasters
      Discussant: Alex Clymo (University of Essex, PSE)
  • Economics of Gender and Health
    • Mylène Feuillade (PSE, Sciences Po) – Following Along: The Gender Gap in Returns to Geographic Mobility
      Discussant: Marion Leturcq (INED)
    • Marta Curull-Sentis (University of Barcelona) – Paternity Leave and Intimate Partner Violence
      Discussant: Sylvie Lambert (PSE, INRAE)

11:00-11:30 – Pause café – Hall PSE

11:30-13:00Session 5 : 2 sessions parallèles :

  • Development Economics
    • Elard Amaya (Collegio Carlo Alberto) – When Extreme Weather Hits Home: Huaicos and Gender-Based Violence in Peru
      Discussant: Suanna Oh (PSE)
    • Nicole Karnaus (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main) – The Influence of Development Aid on Agricultural Productivity: Evidence from a Spatial Regression Discontinuity Design
      Discussant: Akiko Suwa-Eisenmann (PSE, INRAE)
  • Games and Game Theory
    • Giacomo Weber (University of Bologna, PSE) – Coarse Agents and Intergroup Phenomena
      Discussant: TBC
    • Aviman Satpathy (University of Barcelona) – Learning to be Indifferent in Complex Decisions: A Coarse-Payoff Assessment Model
      Discussant: Jean-Marc Bonnisseau (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CES, PSE)

13:00-14:00 – Déjeuner (Hall PSE)

14:00-15:00 – Keynote: Morten O. Ravn (University College London, CEPR) – Antitrust, Market Power, and US Macroeconomic Outcomes

15:00-16:30Session 6 : 2 sessions parallèles :

  • Environmental Macroeconomics/Finance
    • Paloma Pelegry (Sciences Po) – Climate Policies in the Housing Market
      Discussant: Gauthier Vermandel (i-MIP, PSE)
    • Marc-Philipp Bohnet (Humboldt-Universit¨at zu Berlin) – Not Just Knocking on Wood: The Short- and Long-Term Pricing of Deforestation Risk on Global Financial Markets
      Discussant: TBC
  • Labor Economics
    • Nicol Barbieri (University of Naples Federico II) – Work from Home, Quit Behavior and Monopsony Power: Evidence from the Italian Labor Market
      Discussant: David Margolis (PSE, CNRS)
    • Anna Chesa Llorens (Universitat de Barcelona, IEB) – The Nursery School Puzzle: How Childcare Quality and Availability Shape Mothers’ Employment in Spain
      Discussant: Arthur Heim (CNAF)

16:30-17:15 – Pause café et séance de posters – Hall PSE

17:15-18:45Session 7 : 2 sessions parallèles :

  • Empirical Macroeconomics
    • Edison Jakurti (Leipzig University) – Wealth inequality, asset price bubbles and financial crises
      Discussant: TBC
    • Christophe Van Langenhove (Ghent University) – Wealth Mobility in the United States: Empirical Evidence from the PSID
      Discussant: Selma Malmberg (CEPREMAP)
  • Public Economics & Economics of Ageing
    • David Burgherr (University of Zurich) – Saving Responses to Mandatory Pension Plans
      Discussant: Laurent Soulat (Caisse des Dépôts)
    • Matéo Moglia (CREST – IP Paris) – The Spatial Economics Impact of Population Aging
      Discussant: Benoît Rapoport (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CES, PSE)

Poster Sessions:

  • Luciana Bartolini (University of Trieste) – Environmental Inequality and Monetary Policy in an OLG model with Heterogeneous Agents
  • Laura Daniela Contreras Portela (Aix-Marseille School of Economics) – Informality and Place-Based Industrial Policies
  • Aurélien Klopfenstein (PSE, ENS) – Feeling bad or feeling guilty? Isolating the effect of guilt on memory
  • Valentin Marchal (Sciences Po) – When Preferences Cap Consumption: A Scrooge McDuck Theory of Wealth Dynamics
  • Abigail Powers (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) – The Role of Industry-Level Minimum Wages in Determining Labor Market Outcomes

Les organisateurs remercient l’École doctorale d’économie ED 465 pour le financement de la conférence et la Chaire Macroéconomie Internationale pour le financement et le soutien supplémentaires.

La Chaire Macroéconomie Internationale est le fruit d’un partenariat entre la Banque de France et PSE. Partageant la même vision des besoins scientifiques sur les questions internationales, ces deux organismes unissent leurs efforts pour construire une chaire dont l’objectif est de favoriser le développement de la recherche sur le système financier et monétaire international, et en macroéconomie internationale.

Lorsque la carte est sélectionnée au clavier, vous pouvez utiliser les touches + et − du clavier pour effectuer un zoom avant ou arrière, ainsi que les touches haut, bas, droite et gauche du clavier pour déplacer la carte.