View stand-alone events from this page or view seminars by series.

The International RBC Model Finally Works!

9 September 2025 9:30am11:00am
Presented by A/Prof Suchant Acharya, University of Melbourne

Decoding Gender Bias: The Role of Personal Interaction

5 September 2025 11:00am12:30pm
Presented by Dr Ashley Craig, Australian National University

Forecast Errors and Forecast Sufficiency Under Ambiguity

3 September 2025 10:00am11:15am
Presented by Prof Ignacio Esponda, UC Santa Barbara

Industrial Policy Wars and Inequality: Who Loses and When?

26 August 2025 9:30am11:00am
Presented by Dr Adam Hal Spencer, University of Bonn

Rationalizable Conjectures in Dynamic Matching

25 August 2025 11:00am12:30pm
Presented by Prof Antonio Nicolò, University of Padua

Equal Pay for Similar Work

19 August 2025 11:00am12:15pm
Presented by Dr Bobby Pakzad-Hurson, Brown University

Tracing the Genetic Footprint of the UK National Health System

22 August 2025 11:00am12:30pm
Presented by Dr Nicolau Martin Bassols, University of Bologna

Competing Motivations: When More Incentives Lead to Less Effort

15 August 2025 11:00am12:00pm
Presented by Kieran Gibson, The University of Queensland

Growth, Degrowth, and the Use of Natural Resources

12 August 2025 9:30am11:00am
Presented by Dr Conor Walsh, Columbia University

The Double Edge of Broadcasting Justice: Reconciliation and Division in Post-Apartheid South Africa

8 August 2025 11:00am12:30pm
Presented by Dr Gianluca Russo, Barcelona School of Economics

The Costs of Variety: Productivity of Differentiated Production Inputs

7 August 2025 11:00am12:30pm
Presented by Dr Filip Premik, Monash University

Promotions and Group Identity

5 August 2025 10:00am11:15am
Presented by Prof Maroš Servátka, Macquarie Business School

Building Authority/Influence: Is it better to be right or to be followed?

30 July 2025 12:00pm1:15pm
Presented by Prof George Mailath, University of Pennsylvania

Revisiting the Sources of U.S. Imbalances: A Wavelet Approach

29 July 2025 9:30am11:00am
Presented by Prof Jun-Hyung Ko, Aoyama University

Time-based Team Competition: Theory and Experiment

24 July 2025 10:00am11:15am
Presented by A/Prof Ailin Leng, Shandong University

The Impact of Interest: Firms’ Investment Sensitivity to Interest Rates

15 July 2025 9:30am11:00am
Presented by Prof Benjamin Born, Frankfurt School of Finance & Management

Short Course: Econometrics for Policy Evaluations/Econometrics for Causal Inference

1 October 2025 9:00am3 October 2025 5:00pm
This short course introduces the foundational principles of empirical policy evaluation and causal inference, emphasising two central methodological frameworks: graphical models and the potential outcomes approach for estimating treatment effects.

Electrification in the Long Run

2 July 2025 11:00am12:30pm
Presented by Prof Andrew Yates, University of North Carolina

Welfare-enhancing Public and Private Insurance Arrangements for Long-term Care Risk

23 June 2025 11:00am12:30pm
Presented by Dr Karen Kopecky, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

OzMac Workshop 2025

5 December 2025 9:00am6 December 2025 5:00pm
OzMac is an Australian quantitative macroeconomics workshop. The workshop aims to bring together domestic and international researchers to present and discuss their work in the broad area of quantitative and applied macroeconomics.

Developing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Economics Students

6 August 2025 5:30pm7:45pm
Discover an engaging new animation designed by and for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students. This is an opportunity to connect with like-minded educators, policymakers, and community advocates who are passionate about empowering the next generation.

Asia Pacific Productivity Conference (APPC) 2025

26 November 2025 9:00am28 November 2025 5:00pm
APPC 2025 serves as a platform for the presentation and discussion of methodological advances, empirical studies, and policy-oriented research related to productivity and efficiency analysis. The conference will aim at providing a networking opportunity for regulators, government agencies, academics and independent economists to meet and discuss these topics.

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