Presenters

Maryan Farboodi

MIT

Maryam is an Assistant Professor of Finance at MIT Sloan. Her research focuses on economics of big data. She studies how big data technologies have changed the financial outcomes, consequences of emergence of big data for technological growth in the real economy, and methodologies to estimate the value of data. She also works on intermediation and network formation in the financial sector, financial frictions and local and global economic cycles, and covid-19 pandemic and associated policies.

Vincent Fardeau

Higher School of Economics

Assistant Professor of Finance at Higher School of Economics.
Interested in financial economics, in particular asset pricing with frictions and market microstructure.

Miguel Faria-e-Castro

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Senior Economist, Research, St. Louis Fed. Interested in Macroeconomics and Finance.

Stefano Fasani

Queen Mary University of London

I am Marie Sklodowska-Curie Research Fellow at the School of Economics and Finance, Queen Mary University of London. From October 2021, I will join Lancaster University as a Lecturer in Macroeconomics at the Department of Economics. I earned my Ph.D. in Economics and Finance at the University of Rome Tor Vergata. Previously, I was Research Fellow at the Univ. of Milan Bicocca and Ph.D. Trainee at ECB. My interests are in Macroeconomics, Monetary Economics, Stochastic Volatility, Firm Dynamics.

Ernst Fehr

University of Zürich

Ernst Fehr has been Professor of Microeconomics and Experimental Economics at the University of Zürich since 1994. He served as director of the Institute for Empirical Research in Economics and chairman of the Department of Economics. He currently serves as director of the UBS International Center of Economics in Society. He has conducted extensive research on the impact of social preferences on competition, cooperation and on the psychological foundations of incentives.

Sergio Feijoo Moreira

University of Bristol

Interested in Macroeconomics, Productivity, Growth and Firm Dynamics

David Feldman

Junlong Feng

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Junlong is an assistant professor at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology since 2020. Prior to that, he received his Ph.D in Economics from Columbia University. Junlong's research interest includes treatment effect, nonparametric identification, quantile regression, panel data methods, and high-dimensional data.

Wing Miri Feng

Call me Wing. I have a curiosity in e-commerce, trade, and macro. I've worked on models of consumer search, firm dynamics and trade, and used retail marketing database to explore the implications of e-commerce on markups and productivity. I obtained my PhD in 2017 from Queen's

Felix Feng

University of Washington

Department of Finance and Business Economics
Michael G. Foster School of Business
University of Washington