Columbia Macro Lunch Group
This lunch is organized by Stephen Zeldes. It is for faculty, and selected 4th and 5th year PhD students, from the Business School, the Arts and Sciences Economics Department, and the Barnard Economics Department. We will meet for lunch each Tuesday, from 12:30 - 1:45 pm. Lunch will be provided each week free of charge. Most weeks, someone will give an informal presentation of research in progress related (loosely) to macroeconomics.
For further information, or to be added to the e-mail list for this lunch group, send e-mail to: spz1@columbia.edu or give me a call at 212-854-2492. To place or change a lunch order please contact Mionellie Urena at mu2142@columbia.edu
|
Date |
Room |
Speaker |
Topic |
| September 15th |
Uris 306 |
Veronica Rappoport |
Risk Aversion and Wealth: Evidence from Person-to-Person Lending Portfolios (with Daniel Paravisini and Enrichetta Ravina) |
| September 22nd |
Uris 306 | Stefania Albanesi |
Maternal health and the baby boom |
| September 29th |
Uris 306 | Rick Mishkin |
How has the monetary transmission mechanism evolved over time? |
| October 6th |
Uris 306 | Philip Giles |
Federal government responses to the crisis |
| October 13th |
Uris 306 | Ricardo Reis |
Evaluating the unconventional monetary policy of 2007-09 |
| October 20th |
Uris 306 | Perry Mehrling | The global credit crisis and policy responses |
| October 27th |
Uris 306 | Michael Woodford |
Conventional and unconventional monetary policies |
| November 3rd |
No meeting |
||
| November 10th |
Uris 306 | James Kahn |
What Drives House Prices? |
| November 17th |
Uris 306 | Shang-Jin Wei |
The sexual foundations of economic growth |
| November 24th |
Uris 306 | Neng Wang |
Entrepreneurial investment, portfolio choice, and consumption |
| December 1st |
Uris 306 | David Weinstein | Exports and financial shocks (with Mary Amiti) |
| December 8th |
Uris 306 | Mariana Colacelli |
Intensive and extensive margins of exports and real exchange rates |
| December 15th | Uris 306 | Jonathan Vogel | Globalization, Technology, and the Skill Premium |