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April 30-May 4, 2018 |
Highlights from the 2018 Workshop
Course Units
(each unit with six hours of lectures plus three hours of lab sessions and materials)
1) Nonlinear Models of Financial Crises and Macroprudential Policy taught by Enrique G. Mendoza, Presidential Professor of Economics
a. Foundations of quantitative open-economy models with incomplete financial markets
b. Empirical analysis of credit booms
c. Nonlinear open-economy models of financial booms and crises with credit constraints
d. Evaluation and design of macroprudential policy
2) Empirical Methods for Financial and Macroeconomic Monitoring, Modeling, Forecasting, and Interconnectedness taught by Francis X. Diebold, Paul F. and Warren S. Miller Professor of Economics
a. Financial Volatility, Macroeconomic Volatility, and Their Interaction
b. Real-Time Macroeconomic Monitoring
c. Modeling and Forecasting the Yield Curve
d. Connectedness in Financial and Macroeconomic Networks
3) Recent Advances in the Econometric Analysis of Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Models taught by Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, Professor of Economics
a. Introduction to Bayesian inference
b. The Metropolis-Hastings algorithm with application to DSGE model estimation
c. Sequential Monte Carlo methods to estimate DSGE models
d. Using DSGE models to quantify sources of business cycles and effects of monetary and fiscal policy
e. Recent advances in DSGE models: volatility shocks, heterogeneity and massive parallel computation
Half-day Workshop on Public Debt Sustainability
Tools for evaluating the sustainability of government debt using fiscal reaction functions, simulations of a two-country dynamic general equilibrium model with distortionary taxes, and a model of default on domestic public debt, taught by Enrique G. Mendoza, Presidential Professor of Economics
Guest Lectures
Distinguished Guest Speaker: Alan Blinder
Gordon S. Rentschier Memorial Professor of Economics, Princeton University
Distinguished Guest Speaker: Guillermo A. Calvo
Professor of Economics, International and Public Affairs, Columbia University
Penn Faculty Distinguished Lecture: José Víctor Ríos-Rull
Lawrence R. Klein Professor of Economics, University of Pennsylvania