PSE-CEPR POLICY FORUM | Programme détaillé du 30 juin
Jour 5 : vendredi 30 juin 2023
Chair : Katheline Schubert (PSE)
08:30 - Registration and welcome coffee
09:00-10:30 - Keynote lecture : « Is green growth possible ? », Philippe Aghion (PSE, CEPR)
10:30-11:00 - Coffee break
11:00-12:00 - Presentations of the Junior researchers selected by the CEPR call for papers
- « Institutional factors behind the reallocation between manufacturing and service », Tommaso Bighelli (Halle Institute for Economic Research)
- « Transition to clean energy technologies », Claudia Gentile (University of Zurich)
- « Environmental regulation and productivity growth in the Euro area : testing the porter hypothesis », Martin Groiss (Goethe University Frankfurt)
- « The social cost of carbon under climate volatility risks », Xu Lin (University of Amsterdam, Tinbergen Institute)
- « Do policymakers update their views and who do they listen to ? Lobbying and participatory democracy in the EU », Rosanne Logeart (Paris School of Economics)
- « China’s manufacturing pollution, environmental regulation and trade », Dan Xie (Queen Mary University of London)
12:00-14:00 - Lunch break and Poster Session of the Junior researchers
14:00-15:00 - Invited research paper : « Advantageous selection as a policy instrument : unraveling climate change », David Hemous (University of Zurich, CEPR)
Discussant : Fanny Henriet (PSE, CNRS)
15:00-16:00 - Invited research paper : « Knowledge spillovers from clean and emerging technologies in the UK », Ralf Martin (Imperial College London, CEPR)
Discussant : Antoine Dechezlepretre (OECD)
16:00-17:00 - Coffee break and Poster Session of the Junior researchers
17:00-18:00 - Policy conversation :
- Beatrice Weder di Mauro (CEPR)
- Jean Pisani-Ferry (Sciences Po, CEPR)
- Moderated by Jean-Marc Vittori (Les Echos)
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Jour 1 : lundi 26 juin 2023
Jour 2 : mardi 27 juin 2023
Jour 3 : mercredi 28 juin 2023
Jour 4 : jeudi 29 juin 2023
Organisateurs :
- Daniel Cohen (Paris School of Economics and CEPR)
- Jean-Olivier Hairault (Paris School of Economics)
- Francesco Pappadà (Paris School of Economics)
- Beatrice Weder di Mauro (Graduate Institute, Geneva, INSEAD and CEPR)