Dissertations
Brown Bag seminar in Economics | Non-cooperative Technology Transfer under Credit Market Imperfections with Shubhaa Bhattacharyya
4/4/2022, 12:05 PM - 1:00 PM
Welcome to the Brown Bag Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, SSE. The seminar speaker is Shubhaa Bhattacharyya, SSE, presenting "Non-cooperative Technology Transfer under Credit Market Imperfections".
Launch event for Social Innovation Scholarship - 4 April 2022
4/4/2022, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
We invited students interested in this year's Social Innovation Scholarship for a launch event.
Seminar in Economics | Input Sourcing in Lopsided Low-income Economies with Jonas Hjort, UCL
3/30/2022, 3:15 PM - 4:30 PM
Department of Economics welcomes you to a seminar with Jonas Hjort, University College London presenting "Input Sourcing in Lopsided Low-income Economies". (Please note earlier than usual start time at 15:15.)
Brown Bag seminar | How Confidence Affects Beliefs About Procedural Fairness and Preferences for Redistribution
3/28/2022, 12:05 PM - 1:00 PM
Welcome to the Brown Bag Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, SSE. The seminar speaker is Kajsa Hansson, Linköping University, presenting "How Confidence Affects Beliefs About Procedural Fairness and Preferences for Redistribution".
We investigate the causal effect of an increase in confidence on i) beliefs about procedural fairness and ii) preferences for redistribution. The findings suggest that confidence shapes views on how fair the world is, while the experience of success and failure affect preferences for redistribution above and beyond the influence of confidence.
CANCELLED Seminar in Economics | Optimal Epidemic Suppression with Jörgen Weibull
3/23/2022, 3:30 PM - 4:45 PM
The seminar with Jörgen Weibull has been cancelled.
How much and when should we limit economic and social activity to ensure that the health-care system is not overwhelmed during an epidemic? We study a setting where ICU resources are constrained and suppression is costly. Providing a fully analytical solution we show that
the common wisdom of “flattening the curve” is suboptimal. Instead, the optimal suppression is discontinuous.
Brown Bag seminar | Heterogeneous Impacts of Schools Fee Elimination in Tanzania: Gender and Colonial Infrastructure
3/21/2022, 12:05 PM - 1:00 PM
Welcome to the Brown Bag Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, SSE. The seminar speaker is Pedro Guimarães Naso, Henan University, presenting "Heterogeneous Impacts of Schools Fee Elimination in Tanzania: Gender and Colonial Infrastructure".
We investigate the impacts of the 2002 elimination of primary school fees in Tanzania. We explore how the magnitude of these effects depends on differences in gender and colonial investment in educational infrastructure.
Brown Bag seminar | Costly Sequential Screening with Salil Sharma
3/14/2022, 12:05 PM - 1:00 PM
Welcome to the Brown Bag Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, SSE. The seminar speaker is Salil Sharma, SSE, presenting "Costly Sequential Screening".
2022 Ohlin Lecture with Professor Andrew Bernard - "Firms, Production Networks and Trade"
3/10/2022, 3:30 PM - 5:30 PM
Welcome to the 2022 Ohlin Lecture at the Stockholm School of Economics
Brown Bag seminar |Inheritance of Fields of Study with Adam Attmejd
3/7/2022, 12:05 PM - 1:00 PM
Welcome to the Brown Bag Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, SSE. The seminar speaker is Adam Altmejd, SSE, presenting "Inheritance of Fields of Study".
Swedish children are often three times more likely than the average child to attain the degree that their parent holds. To estimate how much of this association is caused by the choices of the parent, I employ a regression discontinuity design to study the choices of individuals who applied to Swedish universities between 1977 and 1999 and evaluate if their enrollment in fields increase the probability that their children later study the same topic.
Seminar in Economics | The Welfare Costs of Urban Traffic Regulations with Isis Durrmeyer
2/23/2022, 3:30 PM - 4:45 PM
Department of Economics welcomes you to a seminar with Isis Durrmeyer, Toulouse School of Economics, presenting "The Welfare Costs of Urban Traffic Regulations".
We compare the short-term impacts of alternative transportation policies to reduce road traffic. Our results suggest that all the policies are costly for individuals: the benefits of relaxing road congestion do not offset the costs of substituting away from cars.