Third ECB Annual Research Conference
25 and 26 September 2018
Main Building, European Central Bank, Frankfurt am Main
Programme
- 8:30
- Registration and coffee
- 9:00
-
Welcoming remarks
Luc Laeven, European Central Bank
-
Session I
Chair: Luc Laeven, European Central Bank
- 9:15
-
The cyclical sensitivity in estimates of potential output*
by Olivier Coibion, University of Texas, Austin, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, University of California, Berkeley, and Mauricio Ulate, University of California, Berkeley
Discussant: Michele Lenza, European Central Bank
- 10:15
-
Accounting for macro-finance trends: Market power, intangibles, and risk premia*
by Emmanuel Farhi, Harvard University, and François Gourio, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Discussant: Jaume Ventura, CREI, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
- 11:15
- Coffee break
- 11:45
-
The origins of firm heterogeneity: A production network approach
by Andrew Bernard, Dartmouth College, Emmanuel Dhyne, Nationale Bank van België/Banque Nationale de Belgique, Glenn Magerman, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Kalina Manova, University College London, and Andreas Moxnes, University of Oslo
Discussant: Julian di Giovanni, ICREA, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
- 12:45
- Lunch
-
Session II
Chair: Massimo Rostagno, European Central Bank
- 14:00
-
Mortgage market design: Lessons from the Great Recession*
by Tomasz Piskorski, Columbia University, and Amit Seru, Stanford University
Discussant: Mariassunta Giannetti, Stockholm School of Economics
- 15:00
- Coffee Break
- 15:20
-
The economics of the Fed put
by Anna Cieślak, Duke University, and Annette Vissing-Jørgensen, University of California, Berkeley
Discussant: Emanuel Mönch, Deutsche Bundesbank
- 16:20
- Coffee break
-
Session III
Chair: Benoît Cœuré, member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank
- 16:45
-
Jean Monnet Lecture: The real-world economics of globalisation
Dani Rodrik, Harvard University
- 17:45
-
Adjourn
- 18:30
-
Conference dinner - by invitation only
- 8:30
- Registration and coffee
-
Session IV
Chair: João Sousa, European Central Bank
- 9:00
-
How EU markets became more competitive than US markets: A study of institutional drift*
by Germán Gutiérrez, New York University, and Thomas Philippon, New York University
Discussant: Şebnem Kalemli-Özcan, University of Maryland
- 10:00
- Coffee break
- 10:20
-
Saving the Heartland: Place-based policies in 21st century America*
by Benjamin Austin, Harvard University, Edward Glaeser, Harvard University, and Lawrence Summers, Harvard University
Discussant: Diego Puga, CEMFI
- 11:20
- Coffee break
-
Session V
Chair: Frank Smets, European Central Bank
- 11:40
-
Deconstructing monetary policy surprises: The role of information shocks
by Peter Karadi, European Central Bank, and Marek Jarociński, European Central Bank
Discussant: Refet Gürkaynak, Bilkent University
- 12:40
- Lunch
- 13:45
-
A macroeconomic model with financial panics
by Mark Gertler, New York University, Nobuhiro Kiyotaki, Princeton University, and Andrea Prestipino, Federal Reserve Board of Governors
Discussant: Veronica Guerrieri, University of Chicago
- 14:45
-
End of conference
Italics indicate the author presenting the relevant paper.
An asterisk indicates a paper written for the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity.
This programme may be subject to change without notice.
General information
European Central Bank
Main building, Conference Room C5.01, Grossmarkthalle
Sonnemannstrasse 20
60314 Frankfurt am Main
+49 69 1344 0
Fax: +49 69 1344 6000
[email protected]
English
Participants are requested to arrange their own transfers, unless indicated otherwise.
Luc Laeven, Bartosz Maćkowiak, Marie Hoerova, Alexander Popov and Sabine Wiedemann (all European Central Bank)
Janice Eberly (Brookings Institution)
Bartosz Maćkowiak
Directorate General Research, European Central Bank
+49 69 1344 5364
[email protected]
Sabine Wiedemann
Directorate General Research, European Central Bank
+49 69 1344 6436
[email protected]