European Public Choice Society 2017

European
Public
Choice
Society
2017
Annual Meeting
April 19–22, 2017
School of Public Policy
Central European University
Budapest, Hungary
© 2017, School of Public Policy at CEU
Layout: Judit Kovács l Createch
Printing: Createch
Table of Contents
Welcome to Budapest....................... 3
Scientific Program Snapshot........ 4
Keynote Addresses............................... 9
Important Information........................ 12
Venue Locations...................................... 13
Wicksell Prize.............................................. 16
Format of Parallel Sessions............ 18
Detailed Scientific Program........... 19
Social Program.......................................... 40
About Budapest and CEU.............. 43
Former EPCS Presidents.................. 45
EPCS 2017 Organizers........................ 46
Conference Participants................... 47
We recycle
Please return your magnetic visitor
cards when you leave. Please also use
the recycling bins that are located
on each floor.
Thank you.
1
Photo: SPP/Daniel Vegel
Welcome to Budapest!
We are delighted to welcome all of you to Budapest and to the
School of Public Policy at Central European University for the
2017 Annual Meeting of the European Public Choice Society.
We are especially pleased to be hosting this important
gathering at the University’s new state-of-the-art buildings
in downtown Budapest that were inaugurated only last fall.
These environmentally sustainable spaces combine the latest
technology with attractive design features – including a
rooftop garden on the 7th floor that offers spectacular views
of Budapest.
This year’s EPCS meeting will showcase the interesting research
that is taking place at the frontier of the field of public choice.
We are also delighted to welcome Catherine De Vries, Gérard
Roland, and Jean-Robert Tyran as keynote speakers.
We have organized a social program that will feature some of
Budapest’s highlights: a Welcome Reception in the Budapest
Jewish Quarter, which is home to the Dohány Street Synagogue,
the largest synagogue in Europe; a Gala Dinner in an elegantly
decorated historic building along the Danube River; and a visit
and reception at the world famous Gellért Baths and Hotel.
We want to take this opportunity to thank the many people
who have provided the invaluable assistance and support
that have made this event possible: CEU President and Rector
Michael Ignatieff, Provost and Pro-Rector Liviu Matei, SPP
Acting Dean Julia Buxton, former SPP Dean Wolfgang Reinicke,
and colleagues at the School of Public Policy, the Department
of Economics, and CEU’s Central Administration.
Michael Dorsch, CEU Associate Professor
Julius Horvath, CEU Professor
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM SNAPSHOT
Scientific Program Snapshot
Day 1—Wednesday, April 19
11:00
Begin Registration
Nádor utca 15
Reception Desk
13:45–14:45
Keynote Address
by Catherine de Vries
Nádor utca 15
Auditorium
14:45–15:15
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
15:15–16:45
Parallel A
CEU
A1: Financial Markets
N15 103
A2:Constitutions
N15 101
A3: Natural Resources
N15 106
A4: Lessons from History
N13 118
A5: Models of Policy-Making
N15 203
A6: Voter Turnout 1
N15 202
A7: Electoral Cycles and Expenditure N15 104
A8: Decentralization 1
N15 105
16:45–17:15
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
17:15–18:45
Parallel B
CEU
B1: Institutions, Policy, and
Firm Behavior
N15
Auditorium A
B2:Tolerance
N15
Auditorium B
B3: Aging and Pensions
N15 103
B4:Non-Democracies
N15 101
4
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM SNAPSHOT
B5: Voting Behavior: Theory
N15 106
B6: Foreign Aid 1
N13 118
B7:Intergovernmental
Transfers: EU Funds
N15 203
19:00–21:00
Welcome Reception
An’Kert,
Paulay Ede
utca 33
19:45–20:00
Welcoming Remarks
by CEU President and Rector Michael Ignatieff
Day 2—Thursday, April 20
09:00–10:30 Parallel C
CEU
C1: Global Governance:
Financial Institutions
N15 103
C2: Security: Conflict
N15 101
C3: Political Accountability
N15 106
C4: Gender Economics
N13 118
C5: Voter Turnout 2
N15 203
C6:FDI
N15 202
C7: Decentralization 2
N15 104
10:30–11:00
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
11:00–12:00
Keynote Address
by Gérard Roland
Nádor 15
Auditorium
12:00–13:00
Lunch
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
5
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM SNAPSHOT
13:00–15:00
Parallel D
CEU
D1: Book Launch: Oxford
Handbook of Public Choice
N15
Auditorium A
D2: Policy Forecast Bias
N15
Auditorium B
D3: Public Debt
N15 103
D4: Security: Theory
N15 101
D5: Tax Compliance
N15 106
D6: EU Politics
N13 118
D7: Regional Favoritism
N15 203
D8: Welfare State
N15 202
15:00–15:30
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
15:30–17:00
Parallel E
CEU
E1: Redistribution and Social
Preferences
N15
Auditorium A
E2: Refugees and Asylum
N15
Auditorium B
E3: Central Banks
N15 103
E4: Political Transitions
N15 101
E5: Municipal Politics
N15 106
E6: Property Markets and
Land Reforms
N13 118
E7: Elections: Ballots
N15 203
E8: Z: Miscellaneous 1
N15 202
Gala Dinner and
Wicksell Prize announcement
Pesti Vigadó,
Vigadó tér 2
19:00–22:00
6
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM SNAPSHOT
Day 3—Friday, April 21
09:00–10:30 Parallel F
CEU
F1:Taxation
N15 103
F2: Security: Riots
N15 101
F3: Voting Behavior: Empirical
N15 106
F4:Enfranchisement
N13 118
F5: Rent-Seeking: Empirics
N15 203
F6: Comparative Democratic
Institutions
N15 202
F7:Education
N15 104
F8: Micro Theory and Experiments
N15 105
10:30–11:00
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
11:00–12:00
Keynote Address
by Jean-Robert Tyran
Nádor 15
Auditorium
12:00–13:00
Lunch
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
13:00–15:00
Parallel G
CEU
G1: Book Launch: IMF’s Fiscal Politics N15
Auditorium A
G2: Direct Democracy
N15
Auditorium B
G3: Economic Growth
N15 103
G4: Security: Terrorism
N15 101
G5: Support for Extremism
N15 106
G6: Religion and Morality
N13 118
G7: Rent-seeking: Theory
N15 203
G8: Fiscal Decentralization
N15 202
7
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM SNAPSHOT
15:30
Social activity
—Gellért Baths or walking tours
19:00–21:00
Reception
Gellért Hotel,
Szent Gellért tér 1
Day 4—Saturday, April 22
09:00–10:30 Parallel H
CEU
H1:Inequality
N15 Auditorium A
H2:Corruption
N15 Auditorium B
H3: Sovereign Debt
N15 103
H4: Democratic Institutions
N15 101
H5: Politics and Policy
N15 106
H6: Foreign Aid 2
N13 118
H7: Labor and Well-Being 1
N15 203
10:30–11:00
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
11:00-12:30
Parallel I
CEU
I1:
N15 Auditorium A
Redistribution Preferences
I2: Media Bias
N15 Auditorium B
I3: Public Policy Focus
N15 103
I4: The Environment
N15 101
I5: Z: Miscellaneous 2
N15 106
I6: Ethnicity and Politics
N13 118
I7: Labor and Well-Being 2
N15 203
12:30–13:30
Farewell lunch/coffee tasting
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
13:30–14:30
EPCS members meeting
Nádor utca 15
Auditorium
8
KEYNOTE ADDRESSES
Catherine E. De Vries
University of Essex
In-Group Loyalty and the Electoral
Punishment of Corruption
Wednesday l April 19, 2017 l 13:45–14:45
CEU l Nádor utca 15 l Auditorium
Catherine De Vries is Professor of Politics in the Department
of Government at the University of Essex, affiliated Professor
at the University of Amsterdam and an associate member
of Nuffield College, University of Oxford. Together with Bernard
Steunenberg, Erik Voeten, Kristian Gleditsh, and Scott McClurg,
De Vries launched and edits Research & Politics. De Vries is also
a member of the Editorial Board of European Union Politics, Acta
Politica, Political Science Research & Methods, and Comparative
Political Studies.
She is the author of numerous journal articles and of the
book Euroscepticism and the Future of European Integration
(forthcoming with Oxford University Press).
De Vries received the 2014 APSA Emerging Scholar Award, the
2015 Sophonisba Breckinridge Award for Best Paper in Women
& Politics at the MPSA Conference, and was selected as a Young
Global Leader of the World Economic Forum.
9
KEYNOTE ADDRESSES
Gérard Roland
University of California,
Berkeley
Culture and Democratization
Thursday l April 20, 2017 l 11:00–12:00
CEU l Nádor utca 15 l Auditorium
Gérard Roland is the E. Morris Cox Professor of Economics and
Professor of Political Science at the University of California,
Berkeley. He is also the editor of the Journal of Comparative
Economics, associate editor of the American Economic Journal:
Economic Policy, and associate editor of the American Journal
of Political Science. The author of numerous journal articles,
Roland has written six books including Democratic Politics in
the European Parliament (with Simon Hix and Abdul Noury)
and Built to Last. A Political Architecture for Europe (with E.
Berglöf, B. Eichengreen, G. Tabellini, and C. Wyplosz). Roland
has received a number of prestigious academic awards and
honors including the Medal of the University of Helsinki (1996),
the Officier de L’Ordre de Léopold II (1997), Jean Monnet
Professor at Université libre de Bruxelles (2000–01), and
Honorary Professor of Renmin University of China (2002).
10
KEYNOTE ADDRESSES
Jean-Robert Tyran
University of Vienna
Behavioral and Experimental Economics:
a Fresh Perspective on Voting
Friday l April 21, 2017 l 11:00–12:00
CEU l Nádor utca 15 l Auditorium
Jean-Robert Tyran is Professor of Public Economics at the
University of Vienna, Director of the Vienna Center for
Experimental Economics, and Dean of the Faculty for 2016–18.
He is also associate editor of the Journal of Behavioral and
Experimental Economics, member of various editorial boards
(Experimental Economics, European Journal of Political Economy,
and Journal of Experimental Political Science) and professional
boards (Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics
and German Economic Association). He is a research fellow
at various institutions (Centre for Economic Policy Research
(CEPR), London; Economic Policy Research Unit (EPRU),
Copenhagen), and has held numerous visiting positions (Harvard
Kennedy School, London School of Economics, among others).
Tyran focuses his research primarily on how institutions like
markets and democracy are shaped by bounded rationality and
social preferences. He has published in general interest journals
such as American Economic Review, Econometrica and Review
of Economic Studies.
11
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
Important Information
Wifi password
Wifi is available on campus.
• Network: CEU Guest
• Password:Budapest1991
Emergency numbers
• Ambulance:
104 or 350-0388
• Police:107
• Fire Department:
105
You can usually find someone who speaks English
at the emergency numbers listed above. If you can’t find
someone who speaks English, phone 112.
Social media
If you tweet about the EPCS conference, please tweet
at the handles @SPPCEU and @theEPCS. The hashtag is
#epcs2017.
We recycle
Please return your magnetic visitor cards when you leave.
Please also use the recycling bins that are located on each
floor. Thank you.
12
VENUE LOCATIONS
Venue Locations
Central European University (CEU)
Nádor utca 15: Auditorium A and B
Rooms 101, 103, 104, 105, 106, 202, and 203
Nádor utca 13: Room 118
The EPCS conference will take place at two recently
inaugurated state-of-the-art buildings that offer high-tech
space for learning, teaching, research, and the exchange of
ideas. These new buildings are part of a multi-year project to
create a modern and environmentally sustainable campus.
In July 2015, CEU was awarded the BREEAM environmental
certification, becoming the second higher education
institution in continental Europe and the first in Central and
Eastern Europe to receive this distinction. We urge you
to use the hydration stations that are located outside the
restrooms to fill up your water bottles.
CEU entrance, Nádor utca 13–15
13
14
A
101
103
104
105
106
B
VENUE LOCATIONS
118
202
203
VENUE LOCATIONS
15
WICKSELL PRIZE
Wicksell Prize
Each year, the EPCS awards the
Wicksell Prize, in honor of the
Swedish economist Johan Gustaf
Knut Wicksell, to the best paper
presented at the annual meeting
by a “young” researcher.
To qualify for the prize, the presenter
of the paper as well as all co-authors must
be under 30 years of age as of December
31, 2016.
The Wicksell Prize is generously sponsored by the European
Journal of Political Economy published by Elsevier.
Wicksell Prize 2017 Candidates
Candidate
Paper Title
Matteo Alpino
On the Electoral Effectiveness of Pre-election
Policy Promises
Catarina Alvarez
The Blame Game of Property Reassessments
Christiana Anaxagorou Foreign Aid and Public Spending:
The Role of Institutional Quality
Hamza Bennani
Overconfident Central Bankers
Miguel Borrella-Mas
Partisan Alignment and Political Corruption.
Theory and Evidence from Spain
Mayuri Chaturvedi
Rent-Seeking Induced Inequality Traps
Stefano Falcone
Endogenous Patent Protection
16
WICKSELL PRIZE
Candidate
Paper Title
Nicolas Gavoille
Political Investment and Pay for Politicians:
Evidence from the French Municipal Elections
Lena Gerling
Riots and the Window of Opportunity for Coup
Plotters: Evidence on the Link between Urban
Protests and Coups d’État
Margaryta Klymak
Trade Impacts of Naming and Shaming of Forced
and Child Labor
Colin Kuehnhanss
The Advancement of Behavioural Insights:
Implications for Policy Design
Jean Lacroix
Steam Democracy Up! Industrialization-led Urban
Opposition in Napoleonic Plebiscites
Weijie Luo
Demography and the Composition of Taxes
Franck Adonis Malan
Does Being an IMF Executive Board Member
(Re-)Pay? An Examination of IMF Loans and
Repayments
Benjamin Ogden
The Imperfect Beliefs Voting Model
Harry Pickard
Explaining Fiscal Decentralisation and the Role of
Ethnic Diversity
Felix Roesel
The Persistency of Public Debt
Samuel Skoda
Hate is in the Air: The Effect of the Czech
and German Radio on the Elections in Prewar
Czechoslovakia
Adam Telek
Power Networks – A Network Approach to Voting
Theory
Federico Trombetta
The Price of Silence. Media Competition, Capture,
and Electoral Accountability
17
FORMAT OF PARALLEL SESSIONS
Format of Parallel Sessions
To ensure that the parallel sessions run smoothly, we ask that
participants observe the following:
1.
Each presentation lasts no more than 20 minutes.
2. Each presenter discusses the paper before his/hers. The
first presenter discusses the last paper.
3. Discussants speak no more than 5 minutes. There is then
5 minutes for general discussion of the paper.
4. The last presenter is the Chair of the session and is
responsible for keeping track of time.
Discussions should be substantive. We suggest that discussants not waste time summarizing the paper, but focus instead on providing constructive feedback that can help the
presenter improve their paper. All papers are hyperlinked
and are accessible directly from the conference program.
Each room is equipped with interactive wall-mounted LED
displays, built-in computers, and wireless screen-sharing possibilities. Please upload and check your presentation slides
at least 15 minutes before the start of your session. We will
have technical support available at all times.
18
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
Detailed Scientific Program
Day 1
Wednesday April 19, 2017
11:00
Registration
Registration will continue
throughout the conference
CEU
Nádor utca 15
Reception desk
13:45–14:45
Keynote address
CEU
• Catherine de Vries
In-Group Loyalty and the Electoral
Punishment of Corruption
Nádor utca 15
Auditorium
14:45–15:15
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
15:15–16:45
Parallel Session A
CEU
A1: Financial Markets
N15 103
Financial Development, Rule of Law and Wealth Inequality
l Roman Horvath, Eva Horvatova and Maria Siranova
Real Effects of the Removal of Government Guarantees in the
Banking Sector: The Case of the German Guarantor’s Liability
l Christa Hainz and Susanne Wildgruber
The Impact of Government-Driven Loans in the Monetary
Transmission Mechanism: What Can We Learn from Firm-level Data?
l Marco Bonomo and Bruno Martins
A2: Constitutions
N15 101
Constitutional Bargaining and the Quality of Contemporary African
Institutions: A Test of the Incremental Reform Hypothesis
l Roger Congleton and Dongwoo Yoo
Majority Rules in Constitutional Referendums l Stephan Michel and
Ignacio N. Cofone
Profiting from Natural Disaster? – Inquiring into the Effectiveness of
Emergency Constitutions l Christian Björnskov and Stefan Voigt
19
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
A3: Natural Resources
N15 106
Is there a Fiscal Resource Curse? The Mitigation Effect of Political
Institutions l Tania Masi, Antonio Savoia and Kunal Sen
The Gold Digger and the Machine. Evidence from the Artisanal
and Industrial Gold Rush in Burkina Faso l Rémi Bazillier and
Victoire Girard
Democracy’s Achilles Heel: Structural Causes of Flawed Elections
and their Consequences for Citizen Trust l Maddalena Agnoli,
Lisa Chauvet, Paul Collier, Anke Hoeffler and Sultan Mehmood
A4: Tolerance
N13 118
Communities after Markets: A Lesson from Post-Communism on
the Institutional Preconditions of ‘Governing the Commons’
l Karoly Mike and Boldizsar Megyesi
The Relevance of Locke and Montesquieu for Modern Democracies:
A Public Choice View l Charles B. Blankart
Activating History: The Turkish Sieges of Vienna, anti-Turkish
Campaigns, and the Rise of Right-wing Populism l Felix Roesel
A5: Models of Policy-Making
N15 203
Endogenous Patent Protection l Stefano Falcone
Too-Big-To-Fail in Federations? l Zarko Kalamov and Klaas Staal
The Political Economy of FDI Liberalization Versus Labor Market
Reform in Autocratic States: An Application to GCC Countries
l Louis Jaeck and Sehjeong Kim
A6: Voter Turnout 1
N15 202
The Elasticity of Voter Turnout: Investing 85 Cents per Voter
to Increase Voter Turnout by 4 Percent l Mark Schelker and
Marco Schneiter
Spurious Weather Effects l Jo Thori Lind
Opening Hours of Polling Stations and Voter Turnout: Evidence
from a Natural Experiment l Niklas Potrafke and Felix Roesel
20
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
A7: Electoral Cycles and Expenditure
N15 104
Electoral Cycles in MPs’ Salaries: Evidence from the German States
l Björn Kauder, Manuela Krause and Niklas Potrafke
Political Opportunism and Countercyclical Fiscal Policy in
Election-year Recessions l Frank Bohn and Francisco Veiga
The Influence of Mayors’ Characteristics and Elections on the
Composition of Brazilian Local Governments’ Expenditures
l Jonatan Lautenschlage and Linda Veiga
A8: Decentralization 1
N15 105
Fiscal Interactions in the Short- and the Long-run: Evidence from
German Reunification l Thushyanthan Baskaran
Government Decentralization and International Government
Performance l Rajeev Goel, Ummad Mazhar, Michael Nelson and
Rati Ram
Decentralization and Accountability in Authoritarian Regimes:
Evidence from Rural China l Vanesa Pesque-Cela
16:45–17:15
17:15–18:45
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
Parallel Session B
B1: Institutions, Policy, and Firm Behavior
CEU
N15
Auditorium A
Regional Quality and Impaired Firms: Evidence from Italy
l Jarko Fidrmuc and Angela De Martiis
Public Procurement versus Laissez-Faire: Evidence from Household
Waste Collection l Jaakko Meriläinen and Janne Tukiainen
The Effect of Policy Uncertainty on Investment Plans: Evidence from
the Unexpected Acceptance of a Far-Reaching Referendum in Switzerland
l Klaus Abberger, Andreas Dibiasi, Michael Siegenthaler and
Jan-Egbert Sturm
21
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
B2: Lessons from History
N15
Auditorium B
Roots of Tolerance: What Explains Western Values Among Children
of Immigrants? l Niclas Berggren, Martin Ljunge and Therese Nilsson
Hate is in the Air: The Effect of the Czech and German Radio on the
Elections in Prewar Czechoslovakia l Bruno Baránek, Kryštof Krotil
and Samuel Škoda
The Tolerance of the Intolerant l Colin Jennings
B3: Aging and Pensions
N15 103
From State to Market and Back: The Politics and Economics of
Pension Privatization in Eastern Europe l Dragos Adascalitei and
Federico Vegetti
Is There a Sisyphus Syndrome in Long Term Care? l Theis Theisen
Why Are Savings Rate so Low and Interest Rates so High in Brazil?
The Role of Unfunded Social Security and Compulsory Savings
l Marco Bonomo, Ricardo D. Brito and Marcelo R. dos Santos
B4: Non-Democracies
N15 101
Are There Types of Dictatorship? l Ronald Wintrobe
The Nexus of Growth, Inequality and Poverty: Are Autocratic
Systems Different? l Dejan Dragutinovic, Andreas Freytag and
Julian Schmied
The Effect of Coups d’État on Physical Integrity Rights
l Christian Bjørnskov and Katharina Pfaff
B5: Voting Behavior: Theory
N15 106
Power Networks – A Network Approach to Voting Theory
l Adam Telek
The Imperfect Beliefs Voting Model l Benjamin Ogden
Intensity Valence l Fabian Gouret and Stephane Rossignol
22
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
B6: Foreign Aid 1
N13 118
The Effectiveness of Aid under Post-conflict Conditions:
A Sector-specific Analysis l Julian Donaubauer, Dierk Herzer and
Peter Nunnenkamp
Did the Aid Boom Pacify Sub-Saharan Africa? l Jean-Paul Azam
and Véronique Thelen
Is Targeted Aid More Effective? Sector-specific Needs,
the Composition of Aid and its Effects on Growth
l Gerda Asmus, Axel Dreher and Peter Nunnenkamp
B7: Intergovernmental Transfers: EU Funds
N15 203
Derangement or Development? Political Economy of
EU Structural Funds Allocation in New Member States
– Insights from the Hungarian Case l Judit Kalman
The Political Economy of EU-funds: Evidence from Poland
l Monika Banaszewska and Ivo Bischoff
Impact of European Funds on Student Performance in Slovakia
l Marcela Veselkova
19:00–21:00
Welcome Reception
An’Kert,
Paulay Ede u. 33
19:45–20:00 Welcoming remarks
• Michael Ignatieff
An’Kert
Paulay Ede u. 33
20:45–22:45 Board of Directors dinner
By invitation only
Kőleves
Vendéglő
Kazinczy u. 41
23
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
Day 2
9:00–10:30
Thursday April 20, 2017
Parallel Session C
CEU
C1: Global Governance: Financial Institutions
N15 103
Macroeconomic Impact of Basel III: Evidence from a Meta-Analysis
l Jarko Fidrmuc and Ronja Lind
Room for Discretion? The Political Economy of the World Bank-IMF
Debt Sustainability Analysis l Valentin Lang and Andrea Presbitero
Cooperation between the International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank. The Role of Competition and Domain Dissent in
Communication and Decision Making l Laura Sabani
C2: Security: Conflict
N15 101
Educational Attainment in the Neighborhood of Conflicts: Evidence
from Sub-Saharan Africa Using Geo-referenced Data
l Krisztina Kis-Katos and Kerstin Unfried
Neighborhood Disputes? Spatial Inequalities and Civil Conflict in Africa
l Richard Bluhm and Melvin H. L. Wong
Opium Cultivation and the Geography of Conflict in Afghanistan
l Kai Gehring, Sarah Langlotz and Stefan Kienberger
C3: Political Accountability
N15 106
The Price of Silence. Media Competition, Capture, and Electoral
Accountability l Federico Trombetta
Interest Groups versus Voters and the Political Economics of
Attention l Patrick Balles, Ulrich Matter and Alois Stutzer
Shirk or Work? On How Legislators React to Monitoring
l Katharina E. Hofer
24
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
C4: Gender Economics
N13 118
Gendered Budgetary Preferences among Flemish Local Politicians
l Caroline Slegten, Benny Geys and Bruno Heyndels
Does the Election of a Female Leader Clear the Way for More
Women in Politics? l Thushyanthan Baskaran and Zohal Hessami
Gender and Monetary Policymaking: Trends and Drivers
l Paola Profeta, Donato Masciandaro and Davide Romelli
C5: Voter Turnout 2
N15 203
A Simultaneous Analysis of Turnout and Voting under Proportional
Representation: Theory and Experiments l Aaron Kamm and
Arthur Schram
Compulsory Voting, Voter Turnout and Asymmetrical
Habit-Formation l Stefanie Gäbler, Niklas Potrafke and Felix Rösel
Term Limits and Voter Turnout l Francisco Jose Veiga and
Linda Goncalves Veiga
C6: FDI
N15 202
Jam Tomorrow but Never Jam Today: Do Democratic Transitions
Attract Foreign Investors and How Fast? l Jean Lacroix,
Pierre-Guillaume Méon and Khalid Sekkat
Election Cycles in Multinational Firm Activities: Evidence from German
Municipalities l Sebastian Blesse and Christophe-Johannes Schild
FDI and Sanctions: Being Good Guys or Good Investors? l Irina Mirkina
C7: Decentralization 2
N15 104
Factors Driving Inter-municipal Cooperation in Administrative
Tasks – Evidence from Germany l Ivo Bischoff and Eva Wolfschuetz
Political Investment and Pay for Politicians: Evidence from
the French Municipal Elections l Nicolas Gavoille
Ownership, Organization Structure and Public Service Performance:
Evidence from Italian Museums l Enrico Bertacchini,
Chiara Dalle Nogare and Raffaele Scuderi
25
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
10:30–11:00
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
11:00–12:00
Keynote address
CEU
• Gérard Roland
Culture and Democratization
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
Lunch
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
EJPE Board Meeting
By invitation only
Nádor utca 9
Popper Room
Parallel Session D
CEU
12:00–13:00
13:00–15:00
D1: Book Launch: Oxford Handbook of Public Choice
N15
Auditorium A
The Political Economy of Rent Creation and Rent Extraction
l Roger Congleton (Discussant: Francois Facchini)
Corruption l Toke S. Aidt (Discussant: Cristina Corduneanu-Huci)
Expressive Voting l Colin Jennings and Alan Hamlin (Discussant:
Ivo Bischoff)
The Politics of Central Bank Independence l Jakob de Haan and
Sylvester C.W. Eijffingerc (Discussant: Wolfgang Reinicke)
D2: Policy Forecast Bias
N15
Auditorium B
Regional, Individual and Political Determinants of FOMC members’
Key Macroeconomic Forecasts l Stefan Eichler and Tom Lähner
Disentangling Political and Institutional Determinants of Budget
Forecast Errors: A Comparative Evidence l Mamadou Boukari and
Francisco José Veiga
Overconfident Central Bankers l Hamza Bennani
Windows of Opportunity? Growth, Government Beliefs and Reforms
in OECD Countries l Mamadou Boukari, Etienne Farvaque and
Franck Malan
26
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
D3: Public Debt
N15 103
“Monstrous Moral Hybrids” and the Corrupting Quality of Public
Debt l Giuseppe Eusepi and Richard E. Wagner
The Persistency of Public Debt l Felix Roesel
When and Why Do Countries Break Their National Fiscal Rules?
l Wolf Heinrich Reuter
Fragmented Politics and Public Debt l Ernesto Crivelli, Sanjeev Gupta,
Carlos Mulas-Granados and Carolina Correa-Caro
D4: Security: Theory
N15 101
Does Overconfidence Drag Out War? l Maxime Menuet and
Patrick Villieu
Bias, Bullets, and Babies l Arye Hillman and Artyom Jelnov
Using Machine Learning To Predict Conflict: Toward an Unified
Theory of Civil Conflict? l Atin Basuchoudhary, Jim Bang, Tinni Sen
and John David
Trading Arms With the Enemy: An Approach Based on Guns Versus
Butter Models l Julien Malizard and Antoine Pietri
D5: Tax Compliance
N15 106
Tax Morale, Aversion to Ethnic Diversity, and Decentralization
l Alessandro Belmonte, Roberto Dell’Anno and Desiree Teobaldelli
Tax Evasion, Institutional Change and Path Dependence:
Experimental Evidence l Aaron Kamm, Christian Koch and
Nikos Nikiforakis
The Effects of Compliance Reminders on Personal Income Tax
Payments in Greece; Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity
Design l Antonios Koumpias
Does e-government improve government capacity? Evidence from
tax compliance costs and public procurement competitiveness
l Anna Kochanova, Zahid Hasnain and Bradley Larson
27
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
D6: EU Politics
N13 118
Influence in the EU: Measuring Mutual Support l Marco Fantini and
Klaas Staal
Winners, Losers, and Public Support for European Integration in
Times of Crisis l Karsten Mause and Bernd Schlipphak
Money Can’t Buy EU Love: European Funds and the Brexit
Referendum l Jan Fidrmuc, Martin Hulényi and Cigdem Borke Tunali
Do Individual Heterogeneity and Spatial Correlation Matter? An Innovative
Approach to the Characterisation of the European Political Space
l Giovanna Iannantuoni, Elena Manzoni and Francesca Rossi
D7: Regional Favoritism
N15 203
Political Motives Behind the Allocation of Investment Grants in
Hungary – A Regression Discontinuity Design Approach
l András Gregor
Does Being an IMF Executive Board Member (Re-)Pay?
An Examination of IMF Loans and Repayments l Franck Adonis Malan
Multi-Lateral Lending to European Regions: Who Gets the Funds
and What are the Effects? l Zareh Asatryan and Annika Havlik
Appointed Public Officials, Social Ties, and Local Favoritism:
Evidence from the German States l Thushyanthan Baskaran and
Mariana Lopes da Fonseca
D8: Welfare State
N15 202
Ignoring Economics: Why Rich Countries Find it Easier to Expand
Welfare States l Bastian Becker
The Welfare State and Reciprocal Workers: A Social Contract about
Equity and Efficiency l Erik Canton
The Impact of Inequalities on the Size and Efficiency of Local
Governments: Evidence from a Benchmarking Analysis
l Kristýna Dostálová, Benoît Le Maux and Jean-Michel Josselin
Lazy Bob and the Bumblebee: Can Social Control Prevent Free
Riding in the Universal Welfare State? l Urs Steiner Brandt and
Gert Tinggaard Svendsen
15:00–15:30
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
28
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
15:30–17:00
Parallel Session E
CEU
E1: Redistribution and Social Preferences
N15
Auditorium A
Economic and Class-Voting in a Model of Redistribution with Social
Concerns l Andrea Gallice and Edoardo Grillo
Bridging or Bonding? Preferences for Redistribution and Social Capital
in Russia l Ekaterina Borisova, Andrei Govorun and Denis Ivanov
Pocketbook Voting and Social Preferences in Referenda
l Johannes Meya, Panu Poutvaara and Robert Schwager
E2: Refugees and Asylum
N15
Auditorium B
Dynamics between the Mass Media and Asylum Acceptance Rates
l Caleb Koch, Izabela Moise, Karsten Donnay, Emina Boudemagh and
Dirk Helbing
Deportation of Asylum Seekers and Government Ideology: Evidence
from the German States l Manuela Krause and Niklas Potrafke
Does Aid Help Refugees Stay? Does Aid Keep Refugees Away?
l Axel Dreher, Andreas Fuchs and Sarah Langlotz
E3: Central Banks
N15 103
Central Banks’ Preferences and Banking Sector Vulnerability
l Gregory Levieuge, Yannick Lucotte and Florian Pradines-Jobet
Central Banks’ Predictability: An Assessment by Financial Market
Participants l Bernd Hayo and Matthias Neuenkirch
Can We Identify the Fed’s Preferences? l Jean-Bernard Chatelain
and Kirsten Ralfz
E4: Political Transitions
N15 101
Democratization and the Conditional Dynamics of Income
Distribution l Michael Dorsch and Paul Maarek
Democracy, Dictatorship and the Cultural Transmission of Political Values
l Davide Ticchi, Thierry Verdier and Andrea Vindigni
The Consequences of the French Revolution in the Short and
Longue Durée l Raphael Franck and Stelios Michalopoulos
29
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
E5: Municipal Politics
N15 106
Partisan Alignment and Political Corruption. Theory and Evidence
from Spain l Miguel Ángel Borrella-Mas
Fiscally Responsible Mafia-clans l Sergio Beraldo, Massimo Bordignon,
Simone Pellegrino, Massimiliano Piacenza and Gilberto Turati
Separated Under the Same Roof: Fiscal Inefficiency of Parties’
Fragmentation and Mayor’s Political Power l Matteo Cervellati,
Giorgio Gulino and Paolo Roberti
E6: Property Markets and Land Reforms
N13 118
The Blame Game of Property Reassessments l Catarina Alvarez
Housing Costs and Inequality in Post-Revolutionary Iran
l Mohammad Reza Farzanegan, Hassan Gholipour and Jeremy Nguyen
The Political Economy of Land Reform Enactments:
New Cross-National Evidence 1900–2010
l Prasad Bhattacharya, Devashish Mitra and Mehmet Ulubasoglu
E7: Elections: Ballots
N15 203
Ballot Access Regulations and Local Politics: Evidence from Italian
Municipalities l Santiago Perez Vincent
Shape or Substance: How Influential is Ballot Design in Elections?
l Agustin Casas, Guillermo Diaz and Christos Mavridis
Complex Ballot Propositions, Individual Voting Behavior, and Status
Quo Bias l Zohal Hessami and Sven Resnjanskij
E8: Z: Miscellaneous 1
N15 202
Why Ancient Greece Failed to Industrialise: Technology, Energy
and City–state Multiplicity l George Tridimas
Minds for the Market: Non-Cognitive Skills in Post-Soviet Countries
l Anna Kochanova and Maryam Naghsh Nejad
December Fever in Public Finance l Vera Eichenauer
19:00–22:00 Gala Dinner and
Wicksell Prize Announcement
30
Pesti Vigadó
Vigadó tér 2
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
Day 3
Friday April 21, 2017
09:00–10:30 Parallel Session F
CEU
F1: Taxation
N15 103
Striking a Balance: Optimal Tax Policy with Labor Market Duality
l Gilbert Mbara, Joanna Tyrowicz and Ryszard Kokoszczynski
On the Boundaries of the Shadow Economy – An Empirical
Investigation l Eran Manes, Friedrich Schneider and Anat Tchetchik
Demography and the Composition of Taxes l Weijie Luo
F2: Security: Riots
N15 101
Riots and the Window of Opportunity for Coup Plotters: Evidence on
the Link between Urban Protests and Coups d’État l Lena Gerling
Steam Democracy Up! Industrialization-led Urban Opposition in
Napoleonic Plebiscites l Jean Lacroix
The Social Dynamics of Riots: Evidence from the Captain Swing
Riots, 1830–31 l Toke S. Aidt, Gabriel Leon and Max Satchell
F3: Voting Behavior: Empirical
N15 106
Electing Parents l Christoph Sajons, Jan Meier and Stephan Wolf
On the Electoral Effectiveness of Pre-election Policy Promises
l Matteo Alpino
Political Cycles and Elections in Russian Regions l Oleg Sidorkin and
Dmitriy Vorobyev
F4: Enfranchisement
N13 118
Suffrage Extension, Government Size and National Identity Before WWI
l Elena Seghezza, Pierluigi Morelli and Giovanni B. Pittaluga
Female Empowerment and Firm Values: The Introduction of
Female Suffrage in Switzerland l Joerg Stahl
“The Shepherd and his Sheep” – How Vatican II Influenced the
Introduction of Women‘s Suffrage in Switzerland l Anna Maria Koukal
31
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
F5: Rent-Seeking: Empirics
N15 203
Who are the Successful Rent Seekers? Evidence from Corruption
Convictions in China l Arye Hillman and Qijun Liu
Pro-poor or Political Targeting: An Analysis of Social Assistance in
Developing Countries l Marina Dodlova, Anna Giolbas and Jann Lay
Princelings and Political Rents l David Szakonyi
F6: Comparative Democratic Institutions
N15 202
Public Good under Appointed versus Elected Mayors: Evidence
about Criminality in Belgium l Andrea Colombo and Ilan Tojerow
It’s a Matter of Confidence. Institutions, Government Stability
and Economic Outcomes l Luca Bettarelli, Michela Cella,
Giovanna Iannantuoni and Elena Manzoni
Disentangling Fiscal Effects of Local Constitutions
l Jaroslaw Kantorowicz and Monika Köppl Turyna
F7: Education
N15 104
The Political Economy of Expenditures for Vocational Schools in
German Counties l Ivo Bischoff and Julia Hauschildt
Are Educated Leaders Good for Education? Evidence from India
l Rahul Lahoti and Soham Sahoo
Upward Mobility and Legislator Support for Education Reforms
l Luna Bellani and Vigile Marie Fabella
F8: Micro Theory and Experiments
N15 105
A Bargaining Experiment with Asymmetric Institutions and
Preferences l Aaron Kamm and Harold Houba
Participation, Contribution and Distribution in Parallel Contests
l Martin Grossman
Corruption in All-Pay Auctions l Chara Papioti
10:30–11:00
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
32
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
11:00–12:00
Keynote address
CEU
• Jean-Robert Tyran
Nádor utca 15
Behavioral and Experimental Economics: Auditorium
a Fresh Perspective on Voting
12:00–13:00
Lunch
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
13:00–15:00
Parallel Session G
CEU
G1: Book Launch: IMF’s Fiscal Politics
N15
Auditorium A
Fiscal Politics l Vitor Gaspar, Sanjeev Gupta and Carlos Mulas-Granados
(Discussant: Julius Horvath)
Governments and Promised Fiscal Consolidations: Do They Mean
What They Say? l Sanjeev Gupta, João Jalles, Carlos Mulas-Granados
and Michela Schena (Discussant: Friederich Heinemann)
Fiscal Discipline and Exchange Rates: Does Politics Matter?
l Joao Tovar Jalles, Carlos Mulas-Granados and Jose Tavares
(Discussant: Jakob de Haan)
It’s Politics, Stupid! Political Constraints Determine Governments’
Reactions to the Great Recession l Fabian Gunzinger and
Jan-Egbert Sturm (Discussant: Adam Zawadowski)
G2: Direct Democracy
N15
Auditorium B
Correlates and Determinants of Direct Democracy l Bernd Hayo,
Jerg Gutmann and Stefan Voigt
Explaining a Paradox of Democracy” – The Role of Institutions in
Female Enfranchisement l Anna Maria Koukal and Reiner Eichenberger
Proposals for a Democracy of the Future l Bruno S. Frey
Policy Making by a Randomly Drawn Assembly of Citizens?
A General Model and Illustrative Application to Northern Ireland
l George Tridimas and John Garry
33
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
G3: Economic Growth
N15 103
National Emergency, Security Spending, and Growth l Toshihiro Ihori
Growth, Culture and Institutions: The Quest for Causality
l Eelke de Jong
Inequality, Financial Development and Economic Growth in the
OECD, 1870–2011 l Jakob Madsen, Md. Rabiul Islam and
Hristos Doucouliagos
How do High and Low Levels of Social Trust Affect the Long-run
Performance of Poor Economies? l Erich Gundlach and
Gert Tinggaard Svendsen
G4: Security: Terrorism
N15 101
The Effect of Migration on Terror – Made at Home or Imported from
Abroad? l Axel Dreher, Martin Gassebner and Paul Schaudt
Heterogeneous Effects of Terror Attacks on International Tourism:
A Dynamic Panel Data Analysis l Valentin Klotzbuecher and
Guenther Schulze
Priming (intra)National Identity: Evidence from a Survey-Experiment
and a Real-World Terror Attack l Colin Kuehnhanss, Joshua Holm
and Bram Mahieu
I Hope I Die Before I Get Old: the Supply Side of the Market for
Suicide Bombers l Thomas Apolte
G5: Support for Extremism
N15 106
The Impact of Unemployment on Extremist Party Identification –
Evidence from Germany l Florian Neumeier and Martin Schröder
The Motivations of the French National Front Voters: A Behavioral
Political Economy Approach l Francois Facchini and Louis Jaeck
The Effect of Income Inequality on Political Polarization: Evidence
from European Regions, 2002–2014 l Hernan Winkler
Political Preferences of (Un)happy Voters: Evidence Based on
New Ideological Measures l Richard Jong-A-Pin, Maite Lameris and
Harry Garretsen
34
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
G6: Religion and Morality
N13 118
Measuring Religiosity by Google Trends l Timothy Yu-Cheong Yeung
Still Influential: The Protestant Emphasis on Schooling
l Horst Feldmann
Is Corruption a Greater Evil than Sin? l Cigdem Borke Tunali and
Laurent Weill
Incentives Beyond the Grave l Jean-Paul Azam and Mario Ferrero
G7: Rent-seeking: Theory
N15 203
Rent-Seeking Induced Inequality Traps l Mayuri Chaturvedi
Gangs of New York: Organized Crime as the Link between Inequality
and Corruption l Soeren C. Schwuchow
Rent-seeking and the Polarization of Politics l Jan Klingelhöfer
Political Rents Under Alternative Forms of Judicial Review
l Leyla D. Karakas
G8: Fiscal Decentralization
N15 202
Does Fiscal Decentralization Encourage Electoral Participation?
l Alfa Farah
Fiscal Federalism and Income Inequality: An Empirical Analysis for
Switzerland l Lars P. Feld, Christian Frey, Christoph A. Schaltegger
and Lukas A. Schmid
Does Fiscal Oversight Matter? l Desiree Christofzik and
Sebastian Kessing
Can Fiscal Decentralisation Curb Fiscal Imbalances?
l Grazyna Bukowska and Joanna Siwinska-Gorzelak
15:30
Social activity
• Gellért Baths or
• walking tours of Budapest
Kelenhegyi u. 4
19:00–21:00
Reception
Gellért Hotel
Szent Gellért tér 1
35
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
Day 4
09:00–10:30
Saturday April 22, 2017
Parallel Session H
CEU
H1: Inequality
N15
Auditorium A
Impact of Inequality-Related Media Coverage on the Worries of the
German Citizens l Matthias Diermeier, Henry Goecke, Judith Niehues
and Tobias Thomas
Globalization and Income Inequality – Revisited l Florian Dorn,
Clemens Fuest and Niklas Potrafke
Mass Media and Attitudes to Inequality l Debora Di Gioacchino and
Alina Verashchagina
H2: Corruption
N15
Auditorium B
Calculating Corruption: Political Competition and Bribery Under
Authoritarianism l Noah Buckley
Does Corruption Hinder Investment? Evidence from Russian Regions
l Nikita Zakharov
Perceived Corruption and Government Level: Far Away Politicians
are Perceived as More Corrupt l Abel François and
Pierre-Guillaume Méon
H3: Sovereign Debt
N15 103
How Do Sovereign Bond Investors Judge the Economic
Performance of the Government? l Stefan Eichler and Timo Plaga
Accountability Bonds – A Reform Proposal for the Euro Area
l Clemens Fuest, Friedrich Heinemann and Christoph Schröder
Restoring Reputation? The IMF and Sovereign Creditworthiness
l Kai Gehring and Valentin Lang
36
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
H4: Democratic Institutions
N15 101
Machine Learning Indexes: Using a New Methodology to Unbundle
the Role of Democratic Institutions for Economic Success
l Klaus Gruendler and Tommy Krieger
Democratic Institutions and Education Inequality l Jean-François Brun,
Gérard Chambas and Constantin Compaoré
Jumps into Democracy: The Short and Long Run in the Democratic
Transition l Martin Paldam and Erich Gundlach
H5: Politics and Policy
N15 106
Politicized Trade: What Drives Withdrawal of Trade Preferences?
l Martin Gassebner and Arevik Gnutzmann-Mkrtchyan
Distributive Spending and Presidential Partisan Politics
l Thushyanthan Baskaran and Yaniv Reingewertz
Electoral Cycles, Partisan Effects and U.S. Immigration Policies
l Marcus Drometer and Romuald Méango
H6: Foreign Aid 2
N13 118
Aid Donors l Andreas Fuchs and Angelika Müller
Foreign Aid and Public Spending: The Role of Institutional Quality
l Christiana Anaxagorou
Information Transmission and Ownership Consolidation in Aid Programs
l Axel Dreher, Sarah Langlotz and Silvia Marchesi
H7: Labor and Well-Being 1
N15 203
Trade Impacts of Naming and Shaming of Forced and Child Labor
l Margaryta Klymak
Parental Depression and the Child Labor-schooling Nexus: Evidence
from Mexico l Björn Nilsson
Human Smuggling and Intentions to Migrate to Europe
l Guido Friebel, Miriam Manchin, Mariapia Mendola and Giovanni Prarolo
10:30–11:00
Coffee
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
37
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
11:00–12:30
I1:
Parallel Session I
CEU
Redistribution Preferences
N15
Auditorium A
Economic Experiences, Target-specific Beliefs and Demands for
Redistribution l Christina Fong, Ilpo Kauppinen and Panu Poutvaara
Political Ideology and the Probability of Upward Mobility Hypothesis:
A Study of Political Beliefs, Mobility Prospects and Redistributive
Preferences l Maite Laméris, Harry Garretsen and Richard Jong-A-Pin
Redistribution in Whose Favor? Preferences with Regard to
Nationality and Type of Beneficiaries l Ilja Neustadt and
Peter Zweifel
I2:
Media Bias
N15
Auditorium B
Partisan “Watchdogs”? Elections and Media Coverage of Corruption
Scandals l Marco Le Moglie and Gilberto Turati
Does the 4th Estate Deliver? Towards a More Direct Measure of
Political Media Bias l Ralf Dewenter, Uwe Dulleck and Tobias Thomas
Coverage Bias on Wikipedia? Evidence from Biographies of German
Members of Parliament l Anna Kerkhof and Johannes Muenster
I3:
Public Policy Focus
N15 103
The Advancement of Behavioural Insights: Implications for Policy
Design l Colin Kuehnhanss
The Cost-reducing Effect of Reforms that Shrink the Public Share of
Healthcare Financing: Evidence from OECD Countries
l Steffen Eriksen and Rasmus Wiese
Perspectives on a “G-Zero World”: Takeaways From Trade Policy
Research l Helene Binder, Barbara Dluhosch and Daniel Horgos
38
DETAILED SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
I4: The Environment
N15 101
Environmental Protection, Cohesion Policy and Regional Economies
in the EU l Jan Fidrmuc, Martin Hulényi and Olga Zajkowska
Shades of Red and Blue: Political Ideology and Sustainable
Development l Toke S. Aidt, Vitor Castro and Rodrigo Martins
Environmental Taxation: Leviathan or Pigouvian? l Isabelle Cadoret,
Emma Galli and Fabio Padovano
I5:
Z: Miscellaneous 2
N15 106
Economics of the Time Zone: Let There Be Light l Pavel Jelnov
An Honest Day’s Pay: Mongolian Small Business Operators Steal Less
than Student Subjects in a Laboratory Property Rights Dilemma,
and Business Success Correlates with Stealing Less in the Lab
l Mongoljin Batsaikhan and Louis Putterman
Pulling Leviathan’s Teeth – The Political Economy of Death Penalty
Abolition l Jerg Gutmann
I6:
Ethnicity and Politics
N13 118
Making a (Vice-) President: Party Politics, Ethnicity, Village Loyalty
and Community-Driven Development l Jean-Louis Arcand,
Samba Mbaye and Jean-Pierre Tranchant
The Geography of Natural Resources, Ethnic Inequality and
Development l Christian Lessmann and Arne Steinkraus
Explaining Fiscal Decentralisation and the Role of Ethnic Diversity
l Harry Pickard
I7:
Labor and Well-Being 2
N15 203
The Host with the Most? The Effects of the Olympic Games on Happiness
l Paul Dolan, Georgios Kavetsos, Christian Krekel, Dimitris Mavridis,
Robert Metcalfe, Claudia Senik, Stefan Szymanski and Nicolas Ziebarth
Family Decision-Making on International Migration l Till Nikolka and
Panu Poutvaara
12:30–13:30
Farewell lunch and coffee tasting
Nádor utca 13
Lobby
13:30–14:30
EPCS members meeting
Nádor utca 15
Auditorium
39
SOCIAL PROGRAM
Social Program
Welcome Reception
April 19, 7–9 pm at An’Kert
The EPCS Welcome Reception will take place at An’Kert, a
popular “ruin pub” in downtown Budapest. Located in a covered
outdoor courtyard within a
former factory, An’Kert’s minimalist post-industrial design
is emblematic of Budapest’s
urban revitalization in recent
years.
Short walk from CEU, just east of
Andrássy utca
Paulay Ede utca 33, 1061 Budapest
Phone: (+36) 70.621.0741
Gala Dinner
April 20, 7–10 pm at the Pesti Vigadó Ceremonial Hall
The EPCS Gala Dinner on April 20, 2017 (7–10 pm) will take
place in the Pesti Vigadó Ceremonial Hall, an elaborately
decorated room that offers
memorable views of the Buda
Hills. The Pesti Vigadó has
had a long and fascinating
Short walk from CEU, facing the
Danube River
Vigadó tér 2, 1051 Budapest
Phone: (+36) 20.429.4124
40
SOCIAL PROGRAM
history. Buildings on this site
have hosted numerous artistic
events and concerts by
world-famous artists such as
Béla Bartók, Claude Debussy,
Ferenc Liszt, Maurice Ravel,
Arthur Rubinstein, and Johann
Strauss.
Reception
April 21, 7–9 pm at the Danubius Hotel Gellért
The reception on Friday evening will take place at the Danubius
Hotel Gellért, which is located at the foot of Gellért Hill along
the bank of the Danube River. This hotel has been a favorite
destination of Hungarians and visitors to Budapest throughout
its almost 100-year history.
Easily accessible via bus, tram, or the M4 metro
Szent Gellért tér 1, 1111 Budapest l Phone: (+36.1) 889.5500
41
SOCIAL PROGRAM
Social Program – Friday Afternoon
We have organized several activities
for Friday (April 21) afternoon. The main
attraction is a visit to the world-famous
Gellért Baths. The baths, which were
opened in 1918 and extensively renovated
and restored in 2006–07, are decorated
in the Art Nouveau style with intricate
mosaics, tiles, and stained glass. The 10
pools of various sizes and temperatures
are located in the same building as
the Hotel Gellért where there will be a
reception from 7 to 9 pm.
We have also organized two walking tours
– of Jewish Budapest and to the Castle
District. The tour of Jewish Budapest
will include visits to several important
synagogues including the Dohány Street
Synagogue (the largest synagogue in
Europe), the Rumbach Synagogue, and
the Kazinczy Synagogue; the Raoul
Wallenberg Memorial Park; the Tree of
Life-Holocaust Memorial; and Heroes’
Temple.
The tour of the Castle District will include
a visit to the Royal Palace, which was
first completed in 1265; Matthias Church,
where Charles IV was coronated in 1916
and where King Matthias got married –
twice; and also the Fisherman’s Bastion
from where you will enjoy a breathtaking
view over the city.
42
ABOUT BUDAPEST AND CEU
About Budapest and CEU
Budapest
The capital of Hungary, Budapest is a stunningly beautiful city
that attracts more than 4.5 million tourists per year. It is located
along the banks of the Danube River in the heart of Europe.
The city is known for its thermal baths, art nouveau architecture,
and cultural vibrancy. You can also eat well in Budapest. It is
home to four Michelin star restaurants and is renowned for its
pastries. Visitors to Budapest especially appreciate its dynamic
and affordable cultural life that is enriched by the presence of
the internationally celebrated Budapest Festival Orchestra and
the many festivals and concerts that take place throughout
the year.
There are a couple of events taking place in April 2017 that
you might want to check out: Budapest Spring Festival 2017
on April 8–24; Budapest 100, an annual celebration of 100-year
old buildings in Budapest on April 16–17; and I bike Budapest on
April 22.
Budapest boasts an extensive public transportation system
of metro lines, buses, streetcars, railways, and ferries. The city
is also easily explored by
foot and bicycle, which can
be hired from the city’s bikesharing program, MOL Bubi.
43
ABOUT BUDAPEST AND CEU
Central European University
In the words of its President and Rector Michael Ignatieff,
Central European University (CEU) “is a new model for international education, a center for regional and global studies,
and a source of intellectual support for building open and
democratic societies that respect human rights.” It offers
graduate degree programs in the social sciences and humanities,
business and economics, environmental sciences and policy,
law, network science, cognitive science, and mathematics. CEU
has a long tradition of, and strong commitment to, academic
and research excellence in public policy, economics, political
science, and international relations. Accredited in the United
States and Europe, the University boasts an exceptionally
diverse student body with students from 108 countries.
CEU was established in 1991 by Hungarian-American financier
and philanthropist George Soros. His vision was to recruit
professors and students from around the world to build
a unique institution that would train future generations of
scholars, professionals, politicians, and civil society leaders
to contribute to the region’s transition to democratic market
economies and adherence to the rule of law.
In September 2016, CEU inaugurated two state-of-theart buildings that are home to the CEU Library, a 400-seat
auditorium, and classrooms and meeting spaces equipped
with the latest technology.
EPCS 2017 will take place in
these two buildings located
on Nádor Street, just a block
from the Danube River.
44
FORMER EPCS PRESIDENTS
Former EPCS Presidents
2013–2015
2011–2013
2009–2011
2007–2009
2005–2007
2003–2005
2001–2003
1999–2001
1998–1999
1997–1998
1996–1997
1995–1996
1994–1995
1993–1994
1992–1993
1991–1992
1990–1991
1989–1990
1988–1989
1987–1988
1986–1987
1984–1986
1983–1984
1982–1983
1981–1982
1974–1981
1972–1974
Toke S. Aidt
Jan-Egbert Sturm
Fabio Padovano
Lars P. Feld
Jakob de Haan
Gebhard Kirchgässner
Jean-Dominique Lafay
Dennis C. Mueller
Douglas Hibbs
Kristian Palda and Arthur Schram
Arye Hillman
Friedrich Schneider
José Casas Pardo
Vani Borooah
Giorgio Brosio
Pierre Salmon
Heinrich Ursprung
Friedrich Schneider
Bengt-Arne Wickström
Francesco Forte
Frans van Winden
Charles Beat Blankart
Jean-Dominique Lafay
Martin Paldam
Charles Rowley
Peter Bernholz
Elisabeth Liefmann-Keil
45
EPCS 2017 ORGANIZERS
EPCS 2017 Organizers
Local Organizers and Program Chair
Michael Dorsch l School of Public Policy, CEU
Julius Horvath l Department of Economics, CEU
EPCS President
Axel Dreher l Ruprecht-Karls-University Heidelberg, Germany
EPCS Board
Lisa Chauvet l DIAL, IRD, Université Paris–Dauphine, France
Michael Dorsch l Central European University, Hungary
Jan Fidrmuc l Brunel University, United Kingdom
Martin Gassebner l University of Hannover, Germany
Krisztina Kis-Katos l University of Freiburg, Germany
Silvia Marchesi l Università di Milano Bicocca, Italy
Paola Profeta l Università Bocconi, Italy
Gert Tinggaard Svendsen l Aarhus University, Denmark
Linda Veiga l University of Minho, Portugal
Wicksell Prize Committee
Toke Aidt l University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Axel Dreher l Ruprecht-Karls-University Heidelberg, Germany
Paola Profeta l Università Bocconi, Italy
CEU Organization Team
Bernadett Báll l Katalin Dér l Liliana Fernandez
l Susanne Lane l Dorothy Lineer l Lucia Sobekova
46
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Conference Participants
Participant
Email
Panel
Dragos Adascalitei
Central European University
[email protected]
B3
Toke Aidt
University of Cambridge
[email protected]
D1, F2
Matteo Alpino
University of Oslo
[email protected]
F3
Catarina Alvarez
[email protected]
NOVA School of Business & Economics
E6
Christiana Anaxagorou
University of Sheffield
H6
[email protected]
Thomas Apolte
[email protected]
Center for Interdisciplinary Economics
G4
Zareh Asatryan
ZEW Mannheim
[email protected]
D7
John Ashworth
Durham University
[email protected]
Gerda Asmus
AWI Heidelberg University
[email protected] B6
Jean-Paul Azam
[email protected]
B6
Patrick Balles
University of Basel
[email protected]
C3
Monika Banaszewska
[email protected]
B7
Toulouse School of Economics
Poznań University of Economics & Business
Thushyanthan Baskaran
University of Siegen
[email protected]
A8
Atin Basuchoudhary
Virginia Military Institute
[email protected]
D4
Mongoljin Batsaikhan
Georgetown University
[email protected]
I5
Bastian Becker
Central European University
[email protected]
D8
47
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Luna Bellani
University of Konstanz
[email protected]
F7
Hamza Bennani
Université Paris Nanterre
[email protected]
D2
Niclas Berggren
[email protected]
B2
Research Institute of Industrial Economics
Luca Bettarelli
College of Europe
[email protected]
Martina Bihn
[email protected]
F6
Springer Science+Business Media
Helene Binder
Helmut Schmidt University
[email protected]
Ivo Bischoff
University of Kassel
[email protected]
Christian Bjornskov
Aarhus University
[email protected]
I3
B4
Charles Blankart
[email protected]
Humboldt University Berlin, University of Lucerne
A4
Sebastian Blesse
[email protected]
C6
Richard Bluhm
Leibniz University Hannover
[email protected]
C2
Frank Bohn
Radboud University
[email protected]
A7
Marco Bonomo
Insper
[email protected]
A1
ZEW Mannheim
Ekaterina Borisova
[email protected]
National Research University, Higher School of Economics
E1
Miguel Borrella-Mas
University of Navarra
[email protected]
E5
Mamadou Boukari
University of Lille
[email protected]
D2
Urs Steiner Brandt
[email protected]
University of Southern Denmark
48
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Ricardo Brito
Insper
[email protected]
B3
Noah Buckley
[email protected]
Columbia University,
Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia
H2
Grazyna Burkowska
University of Warsaw
[email protected]
Erik Canton
European Commission
[email protected]
D8
Vitor Castro
University of Coimbra & NIPE
[email protected]
I4
Michela Cella
University of Milan Bicocca
[email protected]
F6
Jean-Bernard Chatelain
[email protected] E3
Université Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne
Mayuri Chaturvedi
University of California Irvine
[email protected]
G7
Lisa Chauvet
[email protected]
DIAL, IRD, Université Paris–Dauphine
A3
Andea Colombo
[email protected]
Université Libre de Bruxelles, World Bank
F6
Constantin Compaoré
[email protected] H4
CERDI/University of Auvergne
Roger Congleton
University of West Virginia
[email protected]
Cristina Corduneanu-Huci
Central European University
[email protected]
Chiara Dalle Nogare
University of Brescia
[email protected]
C7
Jakob de Haan
University of Groningen
[email protected]
D1
Eelke de Jong
Radboud University
[email protected]
G3
Angela De Martiis
Zeppelin University
[email protected]
B1
49
A2, D1
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Catherine E. De Vries
University of Essex
[email protected]
Debora Di Gioacchino
Sapienza University of Rome
[email protected]
H1
Matthias Diermeier
[email protected]
H1
Cologne Institute for Economic Research (IW Köln)
Marina Dodlova
University of Passau
[email protected]
F5
Julian Donaubauer
Helmut Schmidt University
[email protected]
B6
Florian Dorn
[email protected]
H1
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Michael Dorsch
Central European University
[email protected]
Kristýna Dostálová
[email protected]
D8
University of Rennes 1, CREM-CNRS
Hristos Doucouliagos
Deakin University
[email protected]
Axel Dreher
[email protected]
G3
Ruprecht-Karls-University Heidelberg
Marcus Drometer
[email protected]
H5
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Vera Eichenauer
ETZ Zurich
[email protected]
E8
Reiner Eichenberger
University of Fribourg
[email protected]
Giuseppe Eusepi
Sapienza University of Rome
[email protected]
D3
Francois Facchini
[email protected]
G5
University of Paris 1, Centre d’Economie de la Sorbonne
Stefano Falcone
University of Siena
[email protected]
A5
Alfa Farah
University of Münster
[email protected]
G8
50
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Etienne Farvaque
Universite de Lille
[email protected]
D2
Mohammad Reza Farzanegan
[email protected]
E6
Philipps-Universität Marburg, CNMS
Horst Feldmann
University of Bath
[email protected]
G6
Mario Ferrero
[email protected]
University of Eastern Piedmont
G6
Jan Fidrmuc
Brunel University
[email protected]
D6
Jarko Fidrmuc
Zeppelin University
[email protected]
C1
Nadia Fiorino
University of L’Aquila
[email protected]
Raphael Franck
[email protected]
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
E4
Bruno Frey
University of Basel & CREMA
[email protected]
G2
Andreas Freytag
[email protected]
B4
Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena
Jonas Friedrich
University of Basel
[email protected]
Andreas Fuchs
[email protected]
E2
Alfred-Weber-Institute for Economics, Heidelberg University
Stefanie Gäbler
[email protected]
C5
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Andrea Gallice
[email protected]
E1
University of Torino & Collegio Carlo Alberto
Nicolas Gavoille
[email protected]
C7
Stockholm School of Economics in Riga
Kai Gehring
University of Zurich
[email protected]
H3
Lena Gerling
University of Münster
[email protected]
F2
51
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Federico Martin Giesenow
University of Groningen
[email protected]
Victoire Girard
[email protected]
Panel
A3
LEO, Univ. Orléans & CES, Univ. Paris 1
Johannes Glaeser
[email protected]
Springer Science+Business Media
Arevik Gnutzmann-Mkrtchyan
Leibniz University Hannover
[email protected]
H5
Rajeev Goel
Illinois State University
[email protected]
A8
Andras Gregor
[email protected]
D7
University College London–CORE
Martin Grossmann
University of Zurich
[email protected] F8
Erich Gundlach
University of Hamburg
[email protected] G3
Jerg Gutmann
[email protected]
G2, I5
Institute of Law & Economics, University of Hamburg
Christa Hainz
[email protected]
A1
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Julia Hauschildt
University of Kassel
[email protected]
F7
Bernd Hayo
University of Marburg
[email protected]
E3
Friedrich Heinemann
ZEW Mannheim
[email protected]
H3
Zohal Hessami
University of Konstanz
[email protected]
C4, E7
Katharina Hofer
University of St.Gallen
[email protected]
C3
Manfred Holler
University of Hamburg
[email protected]
Julius Horvath
Central European University
[email protected]
52
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Roman Horvath
Charles University
[email protected]
A1
Martin Hulenyi
[email protected]
I4
Institute for Strategy & Analysis (ISA)
Toshihiro Ihori
[email protected]
G3
National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS)
Louis Jaeck
[email protected]
A5
United Arab Emirates University
João Jalles
International Monetary Fund
[email protected]
G1
Artyom Jelnov
Ariel University
[email protected]
D4
Pavel Jelnov
Leibniz University Hannover
[email protected]
I5
Colin Jennings
King’s College London
[email protected]
B2, D1
Richard Jong-A-Pin
University of Groningen
[email protected]
G5
Judit Kalman
[email protected]
B7
Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Centre for Economic & Regional Studies
Aaron Kamm
[email protected]
C5, F8
New York University Abu Dhabi
Judit Kapas
University of Debrecen
[email protected]
Leyla Karakas
Syracuse University
[email protected]
G7
Bjorn Kauder
[email protected]
University of Munich/Ifo Institute
A7
Ilpo Kauppinen
I1
[email protected]
VATT Institute for Economic Research
Anna Kerkhof
University of Cologne
[email protected]
I2
Sebastian Kessing
University of Siegen
[email protected]
G8
53
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Krisztina Kis-Katos
University of Göttingen
krisztina.kis-katos@uni-goettingen.
de
Jan Klingelhöfer
RWTH Aachen University
[email protected]
G7
Valentin Klotzbuecher
Bocconi University
valentin.klotzbuecher@phd.
unibocconi.it
G4
Margaryta Klymak
Trinity College Dublin
[email protected]
H7
Caleb Koch
[email protected]
E2
Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH Zürich)
Christian Koch
[email protected]
D5
[email protected]
D5, E8
New York University Abu Dhabi
Anna Kochanova
Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods
Anna Maria Koukal
University of Fribourg
[email protected]
F4, G2
Antonios Koumpias
Georgia State University
[email protected]
D5
Manuela Krause
[email protected]
E2
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Christian Krekel
[email protected]
I7
London School of Economics & Political Science
Tommy Krieger
University of Konstanz
[email protected]
H4
Colin Kuehnhanss
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
[email protected]
G4, I3
Shigeki Kunieda
Hitotsubashi University
[email protected]
Jean Lacroix
Université Libre de Bruxelles
[email protected]
C6, F2
Tom Lahner
Leibniz University Hannover
[email protected]
D2
Rahul Lahoti
University of Göttingen
[email protected]
F7
54
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Maite Laméris
University of Groningen
[email protected]
I1
Valentin Lang
Heidelberg University
[email protected] C1
Sarah Langlotz
Heidelberg University
[email protected] C2
Marco Le Moglie
Bocconi University
[email protected]
I2
Gregory Levieuge
[email protected]
E3
University of Orleans, Laboratory of Orleans
Jo Thori Lind
University of Oslo
[email protected]
A6
Qijun Liu
[email protected]
F5
Huazhong University of Science & Technology
Mariana Lopes da Fonseca
mariana.lopes-da-fonseca@tax.
mpg.de
D7
Max Planck Institute for Tax Law & Public Finance
Weijie Luo
University of York
[email protected]
F1
Paul Maarek
Université de Cergy-Pontoise
[email protected]
E4
Franck Adonis Malan
University of Le Havre
[email protected]
D7
Elena Manzoni
University of Milan Bicocca
[email protected]
D6
Silvia Marchesi
University of Milan Bicocca
[email protected]
H6
Tania Masi
University of Milan Bicocca
[email protected]
A3
Karsten Mause
University of Münster
[email protected]
D6
Christos Mavridis
Lancaster University
[email protected]
E7
Gilbert Mbara
University of Warsaw
[email protected]
F1
55
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Mariapia Mendola
University of Milan Bicocca
[email protected]
H7
Maxime Menuet
[email protected]
D4
Laboratoire d’Economie d’Orléans (LEO)
Pierre-Guillaume Meon
Université Libre de Bruxelles
[email protected]
H2
Jaakko Merilainen
IIES, Stockholm University
[email protected]
B1
Stephan Michel
University of Hamburg
[email protected]
A2
Karoly Mike
[email protected]
A4
Corvinus University of Budapest & HETFA Research Institute
Irina Mirkina
Lund University
[email protected]
C6
Carlos Mulas-Granados
International Monetary Fund
[email protected]
D3, G1
Angelika Muller
Heidelberg University
[email protected]
H6
Anand Murugesan
Central European University
[email protected]
Florian Neumeier
[email protected]
G5
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Till Nikolka
[email protected]
I7
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Bjorn Nilsson
Université Paris-Dauphine
[email protected]
H7
Benjamin Ogden
[email protected]
B5
Université Libre de Bruxelles & Texas A&M University
Margit Osterloh
Technical University Berlin
[email protected]
Fabio Padovano
[email protected]
I4
Centre Condorcet for Political Economy–University Rennes 1
Martin Paldam
Aarhus University
[email protected]
56
H4
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Chara Papioti
[email protected]
F8
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M)
Santiago Perez Vincent
Università Bocconi
santiago.perezvincent@phd.
unibocconi.it
E7
Vanesa Pesque-Cela
[email protected]
A8
Stockholm School of Economics
Katharina Pfaff
[email protected]
B4
Vienna University of Economics & Business
Massimiliano Piacenza
[email protected]
E5
University of Torino, Dept. ESOMAS
Harry Pickard
University of Sheffield
[email protected]
I6
Antoine Pietri
University Paris 1
[email protected]
D4
Timo Plaga
Leibniz University Hannover
[email protected]
H3
Niklas Potrafke
[email protected]
A6
University of Munich/Ifo Institute
Panu Poutvaara
[email protected]
E1
University of Munich/Ifo Institute
Paola Profeta
Bocconi University
[email protected]
C4
Yaniv Reingewertz
University of Haifa
[email protected]
H5
Wolfgang Reinicke
Central European University
[email protected]
Wolf Heinrich Reuter
[email protected]
D3
German Council of Economic Experts
Paolo Roberti
University of Bologna
[email protected]
E5
Felix Roesel
[email protected]
A4, D3
Ifo Institute for Economic Research
Gérard Roland
[email protected]
University of California, Berkeley
57
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Stephane Rossignol
[email protected]
B5
University Paris 8, Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Laura Sabani
University of Florence
[email protected]
C1
Christoph Schaltegger
University of Lucerne
[email protected]
Paul Schaudt
University of Hannover
[email protected]
G4
Mark Schelker
University of St.Gallen
[email protected]
A6
Lukas Schmid
University of Lucerne
[email protected]
G8
Friedrich Schneider
[email protected]
F1
Johannes Kepler University of Linz
Günther Schulze
University of Freiburg
[email protected]
Soeren Schwuchow
[email protected]
G7
Brandenburg University of Technology
Elena Seghezza
University of Genoa
[email protected]
F4
Joanna Siwinska-Gorzelak
[email protected]
G8
Faculty of Economic Sciences, Warsaw University
Samuel Skoda
CERGE-EI
[email protected]
B2
Caroline Slegten
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
[email protected]
C4
Klaas Staal
[email protected]
A5, D6
Karlstad Business School, Karlstad University
Joerg Stahl
[email protected]
F4
Católica Lisbon School of Business & Economics
Arne Steinkraus
[email protected]
I6
Technische Universität Braunschweig
Jan-Egbert Sturm
[email protected]
KOF Swiss Economic Institute, ETH Zurich
58
B1, G1
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Panel
Alois Stutzer
University of Basel
[email protected]
C3
Gert Tinggaard Svendsen
Aarhus University
[email protected]
D8
David Szakonyi
[email protected]
George Washington University,
Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia
F5
Jose Tavares
G1
[email protected]
NOVA School of Business & Economics
Anat Tchetchik
[email protected]
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Adam Telek
University of Alicante
[email protected]
B5
Desiree Teobaldelli
University of Urbino
[email protected]
D5
Theis Theisen
University of Agder
[email protected]
B3
Tobias Thomas
[email protected]
I2
EcoAustria – Institute for Economic Research
Davide Ticchi
[email protected]
Marche Polytechnic University
E4
Jean-Pierre Tranchant
I6
[email protected]
Institute of Development Studies
George Tridimas
University of Ulster
[email protected]
E8, G2
Federico Trombetta
University of Warwick
[email protected]
C3
Cigdem Borke Tunali
Istanbul University
[email protected]
G6
Gilberto Turati
Catholic University
[email protected]
Monika Turyna
Agenda Austria
[email protected]
Jean-Robert Tyran
University of Vienna
[email protected]
59
F6
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Christian Ulbrich
University of Zurich
[email protected]
Mehmet Ulubasoglu
Deakin University
[email protected] E6
Kerstin Unfried
University of Göttingen
[email protected]
Heinrich Ursprung
University of Konstanz
[email protected]
Francisco Veiga
University of Minho
[email protected]
C5
Linda Veiga
University of Minho
[email protected]
A7
Marcela Veselkova
[email protected]
Institute for Strategy & Analysis (ISA)
Panel
C2
B7
Patrick Villieu
University of Orleans
[email protected]
Stefan Voigt
University of Hamburg
[email protected]
A2
Dmitriy Vorobyev
Ural Federal University
[email protected]
F3
Rasmus Wiese
University of Groningen
[email protected]
I3
Stan Winer
Carleton University
[email protected]
Hernan Winkler
The World Bank
[email protected]
G5
Ronald Wintrobe
[email protected]
University of Western Ontario
B4
Stephan Wolf
University of Freiburg
[email protected]
F3
Eva Wolfschuetz
University of Kassel
[email protected]
C7
Timothy Yu-Cheong Yeung
[email protected]
Université Paris-Dauphine, PSL Research University
G6
Nikita Zakharov
University of Freiburg
H2
[email protected]
60
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Participant
Email
Adam Zawadowski
Central European University
[email protected]
Panel
Ekkart Zimmermann
[email protected]
Dresden University of Technology
Peter Zweifel
University of Zurich
[email protected]
61
I1
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
62
School of Public Policy
Central European University
Nádor utca 9
H–1051 Budapest, Hungary
Phone: (+36-1) 327-3110
Email: [email protected]
spp.ceu.edu