Monday, July 8
|
7:45 am
|
Coffee and pastries
|
8:20 am
|
Mark A. Aguiar, Princeton University and NBER
Manuel Amador, Stanford University and NBER
Emmanuel Farhi, Harvard University and NBER
Gita Gopinath, Harvard
University and NBER
Crisis
and Commitment: Inflation Credibility and Vulnerability to Sovereign Debt
Crises
Discussant: Olivier Jeanne, Johns Hopkins University and NBER
|
9:10 am
|
Julian Schumacher, Free University Berlin
Christoph S. Trebesch,
University of Munich
Henrik Enderlein, Harvard
University and Hertie School of Governance
Sovereign
Defaults in Court: The Rise of Creditor Litigation
Discussant: Carmen Reinhart, Harvard University and NBER
|
10:00 am
|
Break
|
10:20 am
|
Enrico Sette, Bank of
Italy - Research Department
Marcello Bofondi, Bank of Italy
Luisa Carpinelli, Bank of Italy
The
Bright Side of Global Banks
Discussant: Atif Mian,
Princeton University and NBER
|
11:10 am
|
Julian di Giovanni, International Monetary Fund
Rudolfs Bems,
International Monetary Fund
Sudden
Stops and Expenditure Switching: The Role of Income and Relative Prices
Discussant: Philippe Martin, Sciences Po
|
12:00 pm
|
Adjourn and lunch
|
Tuesday, July 9
|
7:45 am
|
Coffee and pastries
|
8:20 am
|
Oleg Itskhoki, Princeton University and NBER
Benjamin Moll, Princeton University and NBER
Optimal
Development Policies with Financial Frictions
Discussant: Ivan Werning, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology and NBER
|
9:10 am
|
David Berger, Northwestern University
Joseph Vavra, University of Chicago and NBER
Volatility
and Pass-through
Discussant: Linda Tesar, University of Michigan and
NBER
|
10:00 am
|
Break
|
10:20 am
|
Linda S. Goldberg, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and NBER
Cedric
Tille, GIIDS
A Bargaining Theory of Trade
Invoicing and Pricing
Discussant: Brent Neiman, University of Chicago and NBER
|
11:10 am
|
Thomas Piketty, Paris School of Economics
Gabriel Zucman, Paris School of Economics
Capital
is Back: Wealth-Income Ratios in Rich Countries 1700-2010
Discussant: Chang-Tai Hsieh, University of Chicago and NBER
|
12:00 pm
|
Adjourn and lunch
|
Wednesday
July 10
There
is no official IFM program on this day, due to an overlap with the Monetary
Economics Federal Reserve one-day Conference.
IFM attendees are invited to attend those sessions on that day.
|
Thursday, July 11
|
8:00 am
|
Coffee and pastries
|
8:30 am
|
Michael W. Klein, Tufts University and NBER
Jay C. Shambaugh, George Washington University and
NBER
Rounding
the Corners of the Policy Trilemma: Sources of
Monetary Policy Autonomy
Discussant: Menzie Chinn, University of Wisconsin,
Madison and NBER
|
9:30 am
|
Break
|
9:45 am
|
Jordi Gali, CREI and NBER
Tommaso Monacelli, Bocconi University
Understanding
the Gains from Wage Flexibility: Th Exchange Rate
Connection
Discussant: Stephanie Schmitt-Grohe, Columbia
University and NBER
|
10:45 am
|
Break
|
11:00 am
|
Viral V. Acharya, New York University and NBER
Sascha Steffen, European School of Management and
Technology
The
"Greatest Carry Trade Ever? Understanding Eurozone
Bank Risks
Discussant: Anil Kashyap, University of Chicago and
NBER
|
12:00 pm
|
Adjourn and lunch
|
Friday, July 12
|
7:45 am
|
Coffee and pastries
|
8:20 am
|
Gauti Eggertsson, Brown
University and NBER
Andrea Ferrero, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Andrea Raffo, Federal Reserve Board
Can
Structural Reforms Help Europe??
Discussant: Jesus Fernandez-Villaverde, University
of Pennsylvania and NBER
|
9:10 am
|
Matteo Maggiori, New York
University and NBER
The U.S.
Dollar Safety Premium
Discussant: Adrien Verdelhan,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and NBER
|
10:00 am
|
Break
|
10:20 am
|
Galina Hale, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Christopher A. Candelaria, Stanford University
Julian Caballero, Inter-American Development Bank
Bank
Linkages and International Trade
Discussant: Sebnem Kalemli-Ozcan,
University of Maryland and NBER
|
11:10 am
|
Alexandra M. Tabova, Federal Reserve Board
Carol Bertaut, Federal Reserve Board
Vivian Wong, Federal Reserve Board
The
Replacement of Safe Assets in the U.S. Financial Bond Portfolio and
Implications for the U.S. Financial Bond Home Bias
Discussant: Nicolas Coeurdacier, Sciences Po
|
12:00 pm
|
Adjourn and lunch
|