Lea Nagel
Stanford UniversityDavid Nagy
CREI, UPF & Barcelona GSEAnton Nakov
European Central BankAnton Nakov is a macroeconomist specializing in central banking and monetary policy. At the European Central Bank, Nakov has been a Senior / Principal Economist in the Monetary Policy Research Division since 2013. Prior to this, he worked as an Economist at the Bank of Spain and at the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve System. He completed his doctoral studies in Economics at Universitat Pompeu Fabra in 2007 and is a Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research.
Leanne Nam
University of BonnTommaso Nannicini
Bocconi UniversityElisa Navarra
Université Libre de Bruxelles, ECARESMatthew Naylor
University of OxfordIoana Neamtu
Bank of EnglandKyriakos Neanidis
University of ManchesterKyriakos received his PhD degree from the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee and joined the University of Manchester in 2004. His early research activity has covered a wide range of theoretical and empirical topics in development macro, with focus on issues that relate to economic growth, fiscal policy, and foreign aid. More recently, he has focused on examining the implications of monetary and macroprudential policies on bank and non-bank lending including their effects on the real economy.
Peter Neis
CERDII am a postdoctoral researcher in economics at the Centre d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Développement International (CERDI).
My research interests are focused on Development Economics, Law & Economics and Applied Microeconometrics.
Broadly, I am interested in understanding how judiciaries around the world (with a particular focus on India) influence (economic) development.
Specifically, I am fascinated by questions related to the role of the judicial system in societies. How do formal and informal legal institutions interact? What is the interplay between judicial systems and other branches of government? Can the judicial system fill the void left by inactive legislators on many topics? And how does this impact development?
Tsvetelina Nenova
London Business SchoolGuillaume Nevo
New York UniversityWhitney Newey
MIT EconomicsThao Trang Nguyen
UNU-MERIT, Maastricht UniversityGuangyu Nie
Shanghai University of Finance and Economics
Guangyu Nie (聂光宇) is Professor and Head of Trade and Financial Openness Research Group at College of Business, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics (SUFE), China.
His fields of specialty include macroeconomics, international finance and computational methods. Recent work focuses on incomplete market models, financial frictions, financial openness and capital flows, and global solution methods for DSGE models.
Torben Heien Nielsen
University of Copenhagen, Dpt. EconomicsKalin Nikolov
European Central BankDingchen Ning
University of St GallenVolker Nocke
University of MannheimVolker Nocke is Professor of Economics at the University of Mannheim, holding the Chair in Microeconomics. Previously, he has held full-time faculty positions at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Universities of Oxford and Pennsylvania. Volker has broad research interests within the fields of Industrial Organization and International Trade. He has published in leading academic journals and is an elected Fellow of the Econometric Society and the European Economic Association.
Ingmar Nolte
Lancaster UniversityIngmar Nolte is Professor of Finance & Econometrics at Lancaster University. His research interests lie in the areas of financial econometrics, asset pricing, market microstructure and forecasting. His current research focuses on i) the construction of volatility estimators, jump and drift burst detection using high-frequency data and point process models; ii) factor investing with the aim to improve the information content of factors; and iii) the market microstructure of option markets and the estimation of risk-neutral densities using high-frequency option data.