Summer term 2013
Regular Research Seminar
The Department runs a regular research seminar where it invites scholars from other universities and research institutions to give presentations on their ongoing research. Papers in all fields of Economics are welcome. The seminar is publicly announced on campus, but it primarily addresses our own faculty and economics students at JKU. If possible, papers presented are made available for download below.
Time: Wednesday, 17.15 - 18.45
Room: K 127A (ehemalige Bibliothek)
06.03.2013
-
Michael Pfaffermayr
"Who Creates Jobs? Estimating Job Creation Rates at the Firm Level?"
Universität Innsbruck
13.03.2013
-
Markus Walzl
"Fixed Prices vs Auctions Theory and Empirical Evidence from EURO 2008"
Universität Innsbruck
20.03.2013
-
Murat Kirdar
"Does longer compulsory education lead to higher equality in educational outcomes? Evidence from a substantial policy change"
Middle East Technical University of Ankara (Turkey)
10.04.2013
- Liana Jacobi
"Marijuana on Main Street? Estimating Demand in Markets with Limited Accesstba"
University of Melbourne
24.04.2013
- Pia Pinger
"Transmission of Inequality Maternal Skills, Behavior and Birth Outcomes"
University of Mannheim
08.05.2013
- Dietmar Barth
"Die Ökonomie von Sportwetten - Effizienzanalyse von Wettquoten"
University Hohenheim (Stuttgart)
15.05.2013
- Gerhard Clemenz
"Intra-industry trade, environmental policies and innovations: The Porter-Hypothesis revisited"
University of Vienna
05.06.2013
- Michael Kummer
"Content Spillovers through Links in Networks of user Generated Content"
Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung (Mannheim)
Thursday, 13.06.2013, 16:30-18:00
-
Roger Congleton
"The Electoral Politics of Complex Healthcare Systems"
West Virginia University (USA)
19.06.2013, 17:15-18:15
- Matthias Messner
tba
Università Bocconi, IGIER (Mailand/Italien)
19.06.2013, 18:15-19:15
-
Katja Maria Kaufmann
tba
Università Bocconi, IGIER (Mailand/Italien)
26.06.2013
-
Stefan Bauernschuster
"Does the Expansion of Public Child Care Increase Birth Rates? Evidence from a Low-Fertility Country"
Ifo Instiut Munich