Presenters

Deepal Basak

Indiana University, Kelley School of Business

Gaetano Basso

Bank of Italy

I am an economic advisor at the Bank of Italy and an advisor to the Italian Minister for relations with the Parliament. My research interests are in the fields of labor economics, economics of migration and applied econometrics. I obtained my Ph.D. from the Department of Economics at the University of California, Davis, and I am affiliated to the Fondazione Rodolfo Debenedetti.

Michael Bauer

Universität Hamburg

Professor of Financial Economics at Universät Hamburg
Research areas: in asset pricing, monetary economics, climate change, time series econometrics.

Ceren Baysan

University of Essex

I am an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Essex and an affiliate of the Abdul Lateef Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL). I will be on leave during the 2021-2022 academic year at Yale University as a Visiting Assistant Professor in International Development with the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs and the Economic Growth Center (EGC).

Previously, I was a fellow at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard and received my PhD from UC Berkeley in 2018.

Yvan Becard

Sebastian Becker

DIW Berlin

I am a PhD candidate at the Berlin School of Economics. My research interests predominantly include topics from the fields of micro-econometrics, labor economics and industrial organization.

Jeanet Bentzen

University of Copenhagen

My research includes topics related to religion, institutions, economic growth, economic history, and geographic confounders. Most of my recent work is within the Economics of Religion field. Methodologically, I use econometric techniques to test theories from psychology, sociology, theology, and anthropology empirically. My methodology involves broad datasets spanning the globe, allowing testing of the generalizability of the various theories.

Tolga Benzer

Aalto University

Hanna Berkel

University of Copenhagen, Economics Department, DERG

I am a PhD-candidate in Development Economics at the Development Economics Research Group (DERG) at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. My focus lies on small firms, mixed-methods and Mozambique. My working papers examine the effects of formalization for firms, the impact of unconditional cash grants on firm recovery after a cyclone and the effects of changes in government quality on firms' law compliance. Most of the data I use was collected in projects that were managed by myself.

Giuseppe Berlingieri

ESSEC Business School