Presenters

Edouard Challe

European University Institute

Jackie M.L. Chan

Aarhus University

I am an Assistant Professor at the Department of Economics and Business Economics at Aarhus University. My areas of interest are international trade, foreign direct investment, and mergers and acquisitions.

Jeff Chan

Wilfrid Laurier University

Lester Chan

Xiamen University

My fields of research are microeconomic theory and industrial organization, with a focus on potential games, contract theory, and platforms.

Jin-Wook Chang

Federal Reserve Board

Minsu Chang

Georgetown University

Minsu Chang is an assistant professor at Georgetown University. She earned her PhD in 2019 from the University of Pennsylvania. Her research explores how micro-level heterogeneity helps us understand the dynamics of macroeconomic variables. This ranges from estimating a life-cycle model of heterogeneous
households with the micro data to including both aggregate and cross-section data in functional vector autoregressive models.

Ke Chao

Washington University in St. Louis

I am a 6th-year Phd student in Economics. My research focuses on marco-finance, business cycle and monetary economics. I will be on the market this winter and my job market paper explores the relation between market concentration and economic fluctuations within the environment of financial frictions.

Pratiti Chatterjee

University of New South Wales

I am an Assistant Professor at the University of New South Wales in Sydney. My research explores topics in International Economics, Monetary Economics, and Econometrics. I completed my Ph.D. in 2018. Currently, I am working on projects that examine the different channels through which macroeconomic uncertainty impacts real activity. I will be presenting in the session on 'Uncertainty, Risk and Aggregate Fluctuations' on August 25th.

Tarana Chauhan

Cornell University

I'm a rising fourth year PhD student in applied economics and management. I'm currently working on topics of labor and gender, with focus on income effects on intimate partner violence.

Daniel Chaves

University of Western Ontario