Past Money and Banking Workshops

Click to expand workshop details below. For questions about the Money and Banking workshop, please contact Jamie Temmer

October 2
Laura Pilossoph, Duke University
"Overworked: Implications for a Shorter Workweek" (with Gregor Jarosch and Anthony Swaminathan)

October 9
Michael Waugh, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"Heterogeneous Agent Trade"

October 16
Conor Walsh, Columbia University
"Are Inflationary Shocks Regressive? A Feasible Set Approach"

October 23
Benjamin Schoefer, University of California, Berkeley
"Conflict in Dismissals: Evidence from ``Separations by Mutual Agreement'' in France" ( Coauthor: Pauline Carry )

October 30
Martin Beraja, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
“The Life-cycle of Concentrated Industries”

November 6
Simon Gilchrist, New York University
"The Green Transition in a Putty-Clay Model of Capital"

November 13
Johannes Wieland, University of California, San Diego
Why Are Some Recoveries Weak and Others Strong?

November 20
Maryam Farboodi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"Equilibrium Spillover of Big Data" (with Peter Kondor and Pablo Kurlat)

November 27
NO MEETING

December 4
Mark Aguiar, Princeton University
"How Good is International Risk Sharing?"

December 11
Thomas Sampson, London School of Economics
Topic: TBA

March 20
Corina Boar, NYU
"Nonlinear Inflation Dynamics in Menu Cost Economies"

March 27
Daron Acemoglu, MIT
“Community and Employment:Socioeconomic Cooperation and Its Breakdown”

April 3
Manuel Amador, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 
"Sovereign Swaps and Sovereign Default: Fundamental versus Confidence Risk with Mark Aguiar"

April 10
Ricardo Lagos, NYU
"Monetary Policy Operations: Theory, Evidence, and Tools for Quantitative Analysis"

April 17
Marios Angeletos, Northwestern University    
"Deficits and Inflation: Beyond FTPL" (joint with Chen Lian and Christian Wolf)

April 24
Jonathan Payne, Princeton University
"Convenience Yields and Financial Repression” (joint with Bálint Szőke (FED Board))

May 1
Robert Barro, Harvard University
"Fiscal Influences on Inflation in OECD Countries, 2020-2022"

May 8
Christian Wolf, MIT 
"Evaluating Policy Counterfactuals: A “VAR-Plus” Approach"

May 15
Cristina Arellano, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"Official Sovereign Debt, which is joint with Leonardo Barreto"

May 22
Tom Sargent, NYU
 "Implementing a Ramsey Plan" (joint with Wei Jian and Neng Wang)

May 29
Nobuhiro Kiyotaki, Princeton University
 "Nominal Wages and Aggregate Fluctuations" with Kosuke Aoki of Tokyo University
Location: SHFE 112 (Please note the location change)

September 27
Lukas Nord, Minneapolis Fed.  
"Shopping, Demand Composition, and Equilibrium Prices"

October 4
Chad Jones, Stanford University
"Population and Welfare: The Greatest Good for the Greatest Number" (with Adhami, Bils, and Klenow)

October 11
Lawrence Christiano, Northwestern University
Topic TBA

October 18
Chenzi Xu, Stanford University
Topic TBA

October 25
Adrien Bilal, Harvard University
Anticipating Climate Change Across the United States,” joint with E. Rossi-Hansberg

November 1
Gene Grossman, Princeton University
"Resilience in Vertical Supply Chains"

November 8
Thomas Winberry, University of Pennsylvania
"Investment, Innovation, and Financial Frictions,” joint with Pablo Ottonello"

November 15
Matteo Maggiori, Stanford University 
"A Framework for Geoeconomics"

November 29
Luigi Bocola, Stanford University
"The Macroeconomics of Trade Credit"

December 6 (Time changed for this workshop only to 3:00 - 4:30 p.m.)
 Ulrike Malmendier, University of California Berkeley
"The Long-lasting Effects of Experiencing Communism on Attitudes towards Financial Markets"