PhD Student Seminars

Winter 2023

Date Time Location Presenter Title

Feb 10

1:00pm-2:00pm

Hybrid Online Zoom Meeting/HH 235 Sudipto Ghosh, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Modeling "Good" and "Bad" Volatilities Under a Threshold Realized Semivariance GARCH

Fall 2022

Date Time Location Presenter Title

Dec 2

2:00pm-3:00pm

Hosted Online Zoom Meeting Khusro Mir, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ "A global meta-analysis of forested watershed valuation studies"

Winter 2022

Date Time Location Presenter Title

April 8

10:00am-11:00am

Hosted Online Zoom Meeting Zetian Zhang, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ "A consistent test of fractional Brownian motion"

Fall 2021

Date Time Location Presenter Title

October 6

2:00pm-3:00pm

Hosted Online Zoom Meeting Aidi Yu, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ "Living and Working: Spatial Sorting, Commuting and Wage Inequality"
October 20 2:00pm-3:00pm Hosted Online Zoom Meeting Khusro Mir, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ "Comparing alternative decision-making paradigms to explain moral hazards in Payments for Ecosystem ServicesÌý"
October 27 11:00am-12:00pm Hosted Online Zoom Meeting Wenzuo Xu, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ "Machine Learning Empowered Instrumental Variable Regression for Causal Inference under Weak Identification"

Winter 2021

Date Time Location Presenter Title
January 14

2:30pm - 3:30pm

Hosted on WebEx -

Christopher Dobronyi, University of Toronto

Field of Interest: non-parametric identification and estimation of demand systems and preference; big data

"Consumer Theory with Non-Parametric Taste Uncertainty and Individual Heterogeneity" - joint work withÌýChristian Gourieroux

January 21 2:30pm - 3:30pm Hosted on WebEx -

Samantha Goertz, Western University

Field of Interest: climate and development

"Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity in the Climate-Migration Relationship:ÌýA Study of Internal Migration in Kenya and Tanzania"

March 4

2:30pm - 3:30pm Hosted on WebEx -

Frank Leenders, University of Toronto

Field of Interest: macroeconomics and labour economics

"Recall and Heterogeneity in the Scarring Effects of Displacement"

March 18 2:30pm - 3:30pm Hosted on WebEx -

John Baker, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ

Field of interest: macroeconomics and policy evaluation

"Business Cycles, Immigration and Labour Markets: Analysis of a Policy Experiment"
April 1 2:30pm - 3:30pm

Hosted on WebEx -Ìý

Renliang (Jason) Liu, University of Guelph

Field of interest: economic development, international economics, applied econometrics

"A Domino Theory of Regionalism Revisited: The Role of Homogeneity/Heterogeneity in Institutions"

Fall 2020

Date Time Location Presenter Title

September 10

Ìý2:30-3:30±è³¾

Hosted on WebEx -

Zehua Pan, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ

ÌýThe Impact of Green Infrastructure on Water Treatment Costs and Drinking Water Incidents: A Spatial Instrumental Variable Regression Model
September 17 2:30-3:30pm Hosted on WebEx - Xinyuan Yang, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Agricultural fertilizer use under uncertainty
October 1 2:30-3:30pm Hosted on WebEx -

Fulei Liu, Western University

Field of Interest:Ìýfinancial econometrics, machine learning, asset pricing, risk management

Can the Premium for Idiosyncratic Tail Risk be Explained by Exposures to its Common Factor?
October 15 10-11am Hosted on WebEx - Zhuojing Zhang, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ "Where does the heaviness start from?"
November 5 2:30pm - 3:30pm

Hosted on WebEx -

Iuliia Nesterova, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ "Consumption in Extended Family and Race Differentials"
November 19 2:30pm - 3:30pm Hosted on WebEx -

Meng Li, Queen's University

Field of interest: Macroeconomics and Urban Economics

"Within-city Income Inequality, Neighborhood Gentrification, and House Prices"

December 3 2:30pm - 3:30pm Hosted on WebEx -

Zijian Wang, Western University

Field of Interest:ÌýMonetary Economics, Macroeconomics, Search Theory

"Tax Compliance, Payment Choice, and Central Bank Digital Currency"

Time and Location -ÌýFall 2019

External PhD seminars

Date Time Location Presenter Title

September 27

Ìý4-5±è³¾

EV3 3412

Jacob Loree, Ryerson University

Field of interest:Ìýlabour economics; search frictions; occupational skills

"Multidimensional Skill Accumulation and Mismatch Over the Lifecycle"
October 3 2-3pm HH 259

Terrence (Adam) Rooney, Western University

Field of interest: applied game theory

"The Value and Effect of Perceptiveness in a Market-Entry Setting"
November 5 2:30-3:30pm HH 227

Renliang (Jason) Liu, University of Guelph

Field of Interest:Ìýinternational economics and applied econometrics

"What drives illicit financial flows? An Analysis Based on Trade Misinvoicing with Nonlinearities"
January 17 2:00-3:00pm HH 235

Alina Garnham, Queens University

Field of Interest: Macroeconomics

"Fighting for Fares: Uber and the Declining Market Price of Licensed Taxicabs"
January 24 1:30-2:30pm HH 235

Speaker: Chaoyi Chen, University of Guelph

Field of Interest: Empirical Growth, Energy Economics and Financial Econometrics

"A GMM estimator of linear index threshold model"
March 13 2-3:00pm HH 235

Speaker: Fulei (Fred) Liu, Western University

Field of interest: Finance; Asset Pricing; Risk Management

"Is the Tail Wagging the Dog? What Idiosyncratic Tail Risk Implies about Institutional Investors and Asset Prices."

Goals

PhD Students in the Department of Economics at University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ organize a bi-weekly seminar in each semester. The goals of the seminar are to provide graduate students opportunities to develop presentation skills and to provide a friendly academic environment in which PhD students can present their research advancements and benefit from criticism. The seminar is a great opportunity to improve presentation skills, to receive feedback from colleagues and professors, to strengthen the PhD community, and to share our academic worries and questions in a constructive and friendly meeting.

Presenters

Following the successful passage of the Comprehensive Examinations, students will present in the Economics PhD student seminar starting in their second year and continuing until the semester of their thesis defense.

PhD students from other departments and universities are welcome to present if their topics are related to Economics. Master students and other academics are also welcome to contribute to the seminar.

The presentation will be 30-45 minute, followed by question time. The time and location will be announced in the beginning of every semester. The bi-weekly presentations will be scheduled as regularly as possible and repeated on a more or less regular basis.


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