Title | Presenter(s) | Type | Field | Date | Time | Length | Room | Favourite | Calendar Add | Session |
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Schumpeter Lecture | David Autor | Keynote Address | 29/08 | 17:45 CEST | 75 mins | Zaal Sorbonne (M2-03) | Add to Calendar 2024-08-29 17:45:00 2024-11-20 12:06:55 EEA-ESEM 2024: Schumpeter Lecture. Room: Zaal Sorbonne (M2-03) EEA-ESEM 2024 congress@eeassoc.org Europe/Rome public | Keynote Address
29/08 (17:45 CEST) | 75 mins | Room: Zaal Sorbonne (M2-03) Schumpeter Lecture |
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Hotelling Lectures in Economic Theory | Alberto Bisin | Lunch Sessions, Panel & Workshop | 30/08 | 09:00 CEST | Zaal Tokyo (M1-17) | Add to Calendar 2024-08-30 09:00:00 2024-11-20 12:06:55 EEA-ESEM 2024: Hotelling Lectures in Economic Theory. Room: Zaal Tokyo (M1-17) In these lectures we shall aim at building models of long-run socio-economic growth which are well-founded on the political economy of cultural and institutional evolution. As Vilfredo Pareto’s circulation of the elites, relevant long-run socio-economic outcomes are modeled as the result of the relative political power of different elites jointly evolving over time with their own and civic society’s relevant cultural traits. To this end, we shall first study models of the evolution of culture and of institutions per se. These models shall be then fruitfully embedded in a formal analysis of long-run socio-economic growth, which includes economic growth but also e.g., the dynamics of democratic political participation, of various dimensions of inequality, ethnic fractionalization, and other relevant societal characteristics. These models shall be built with an eye at providing informal and formal guidance and support to the wealth of empirical studies in Historical Economics which identify the causal determinants of long-run socio-economic growth by exploiting the persistence of the cultural traits of elites and civic society as well as the persistence of societal institutional characteristics. The titles of the three distinct lectures are the following:9:00-10:30 Lecture 1: Cultural dynamics11-12:30Lecture 2: Institutional dynamicsLUNCH: 12:30-13:3013:45 - 15:15Lecture 3: Political economy theories of long-run socio-economic growthLunch is included for participants of the Hotelling Lectures In these lectures we shall aim at building models of long-run socio-economic growth which are well-founded on the political economy of cultural and institutional evolution. As Vilfredo Pareto’s circulation of the elites, relevant long-run socio-economic outcomes are modeled as the result of the relative political power of different elites jointly evolving over time with their own and civic society’s relevant cultural traits. To this end, we shall first study models of the evolution of culture and of institutions per se. These models shall be then fruitfully embedded in a formal analysis of long-run socio-economic growth, which includes economic growth but also e.g., the dynamics of democratic political participation, of various dimensions of inequality, ethnic fractionalization, and other relevant societal characteristics. These models shall be built with an eye at providing informal and formal guidance and support to the wealth of empirical studies in Historical Economics which identify the causal determinants of long-run socio-economic growth by exploiting the persistence of the cultural traits of elites and civic society as well as the persistence of societal institutional characteristics. The titles of the three distinct lectures are the following:9:00-10:30 Lecture 1: Cultural dynamics11-12:30Lecture 2: Institutional dynamicsLUNCH: 12:30-13:3013:45 - 15:15Lecture 3: Political economy theories of long-run socio-economic growthLunch is included for participants of the Hotelling Lectures EEA-ESEM 2024 congress@eeassoc.org Europe/Rome public | Lunch Sessions, Panel & Workshop
30/08 (09:00 CEST) | | Room: Zaal Tokyo (M1-17) Hotelling Lectures in Economic Theory |