Thomas Jungbauer
Cornell UniversityMy name is Thomas Jungbauer, I am Assistant Professor of Strategy & Business Economics at the SC Johnson Graduate School of Management at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. I am an applied micro-economic theorist with diverse research interests covering market design, labor & personnel economics, industrial organization, and innovation. I received my PhD in Managerial Economics & Strategy from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University in 2016.
Diego Kaenzig
London Business SchoolI am a PhD candidate at London Business School. My research interests are in business cycles and macroeconomic policy. In my research, I study the role of energy and climate change for financial and macroeconomic fluctuations and how economic inequality and household finance matter for the macroeconomy and macroeconomic policy. My research highlights that climate change and inequality also have important implications for the business cycle, above and beyond the significant long-run effects.
Jay Kahn
Office of Financial ResearchRobert Jay Kahn is a research economist at the Office of Financial Research, U.S. Department of the Treasury. His research explores the macroeconomic consequences of financial frictions in the provision of safety and liquidity by financial markets, with special attention to money markets and Treasury markets. He received a PhD in finance from the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan.
Caspar Kaiser
Wellbeing Research Centre, University of OxfordIlze Kalnina
North Carolina State UniversityMyrto Kalouptsidi
Harvard UniversityAshwin Kambhampati
United States Naval AcademyMy research is in the area of microeconomic theory; I am particularly interested in applications of contract theory and matching theory to problems concerning the internal organization of firms.
Ilja Kantorovitch
EPFLPhD in Economics from UPF. Starting a Postdoc at EPFL in September. Interested in Macroeconomics, Finance, Information Economics.