Presenters

Pantelis Karapanagiotis

EBS University Wiesbaden

I am an assistant professor at EBS University in Wiesbaden, an affiliate researcher of the Leibniz Institute SAFE in Frankfurt, and I am also a member of the EurHisFirm Project. Moreover, I am the maintainer of the econometric package DISEQ on CRAN.

I am primarily interested in behavioral theory and the effect of cognitive limitations in decision-making on market outcomes.

Katja Kaufmann

Johannes-Gutenberg University Mainz

Kohei Kawaguchi

Remzi Kaygusuz

Sabanci University

Michael Keane

UNSW

Patrick Kehoe

Stanford University

Patrick Kehoe joined the Stanford Economic Department in 2015. His research focuses on international macroeconomics. Recently, he has focused on developing business cycle models that quantitatively account for the Great Recession and developing optimal bailout policies during such downturns. Prior to that he worked on categorizing patterns of business cycles across countries and over time, new models of financial frictions, optimal monetary and fiscal policy, time inconsistency issues.

Felix Kersting

Humboldt University Berlin

I am a Post Doc at the department of economics at Humboldt University. I focus on topics around economic history and political economy. I obtained my PhD in December 2020 from Humboldt University (supervisor: Nikolaus Wolf).

Ajinkya Keskar

Rice University

I am a fifth-year Ph.D. student in the Department of Economics at Rice University. My primary research interest is development economics, focusing on family economics, gender, and marriage markets in India.

Anne Kesselring

Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen/Nürnberg

I am a PhD Candidate at Friedrich-Alexander-University in Nuremberg, where I work at the Chair of Public Finance. My research is focused on public and environmental economics. In particular, I study the effects of environmental regulation on the European Common Market.

Armen P Khederlarian

University of Connecticut

I am a Post-Doctoral Researcher in International Economics and Data Science at the University of Connecticut.

I am interested in International Trade, Development and Macroeconomics. My research emphasizes the dynamic aspect of international trade and contributes to the understanding of the trade pattern and welfare effects driven by trade policy.