L’AMSE, la Banque de France & le CEPR organisent une conférence les 14 et 15 novembre 2019 à Paris. L'objectif de l'atelier est d'examiner les tendances récentes de la mobilité sociale, ainsi que leurs causes et leurs conséquences.
"Inscriptions fermées"
November 14 |
|
13.30-14.00 | Registration and coffee |
14.00-14.10 | Opening remarks: Denis Beau (Banque de France) & Alain Trannoy (AMSE) |
14.10-15.10 | Keynote lecture #1: On worker and firm heterogeneity in wages and employment mobility: Evidence from Danish register data, Jean-Marc Robin (Sciences Po & UCL) |
15.10-16.00 | A Dynamic Empirical Model of Frictional Spatial Job Search, Christian Schluter (AMSE) |
16.00-16.30 | Coffee break |
16.30-18.10 | Heterogeneity and wage inequalities over the life cycle, Sébastien Roux (INSEE) The end of the American dream? Inequality and segregation in US cities, Alessandra Fogli (Fed of Minneapolis) |
November 15 |
|
9.00-10.40 | The changing geography of intergenerational mobility, Jack Blundell (Stanford Univ.) Intergenerational mobility in China across space, Yining Geng (Univ. of Liverpool) |
10.40-11.00 | Coffee break |
11.00-12.00 | Keynote lecture #2: Intergenerational wealth formation over the life cycle: Evidence from Danish wealth records 1984-2013, Wojciech Kopczuk (Columbia Univ. & CEPR) |
12.00-13.00 | Lunch |
13.00-14.40 | “And yet it moves”: Intergenerational mobility in Italy, Alberto Polo (Bank of England) The wealth origins of income mobility, Tarik Roukny (KU Leuven) |
14.40-15.00 | Coffee break |
15.00-16.40 | Spatial disparities in France in the long run: From diverging production to converging income, Aurélie Sotura (Banque de France) Dynamic approach of spatial segregation: A framework with mobile phone data, Lino Galiana (INSEE) |
16.40-16.45 | Concluding remarks |
Comité scientifique : Clémence Berson (Banque de France), Bertrand Garbinti (Banque de France), Cecilia García-Peñalosa (Aix-Marseille School of Economics), Erwan Gautier (Banque de France), Eva Moreno-Galbis (Aix-Marseille School of Economics), Frédérique Savignac (Banque de France), Jan Stuhler (Université Carlos III de Madrid) et Alain Trannoy (Aix-Marseille School of Economics).
Mis à jour le : 19/12/2019 11:38