Macroeconomics and International
Macroeconomics and International Economics
The Macro and International Economics Research Group consists of faculty and PhD students and is primarily a research group. Most of the interaction centres around our weekly seminar and workshop, but we also take responsibility for the teaching curriculum in macroeconomics, international finance and international trade. Our members are also affiliated with the Centre for Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy (CAGE), the Centre for Macroeconomics (CfM), the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR), and the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). We frequently host visitors for research seminars or longer stays.
At the heart of the group's interaction are the weekly seminar for external visitors and a weekly workshop for internal faculty and PhD students. Our other events include annual workshops in empirical macro (with Warwick Business School), international trade (with CAGE) and the "Micro and Macro" workshops (with the Econometrics and Labour Group), occasional conferences, an internal summer workshop, reading groups, and a welcome lunch for the new PhD students at the start of the academic year.
Our activities
Macroeconomics and International Economics Seminar
Thursday: 2.00-3.30pm
For faculty and PhD students at Warwick and other top-level academic institutions across the world. For a detailed scheduled of speakers confirmed please follow the Events link below.
Organisers: Federico Rossi, Christine Braun and Marta Santamaria
Macroeconomics and International Economics Workshop
Tuesday: 12.00-1.00pm
For faculty and PhD students at Warwick and occasional external speakers, to present their work and give feedback to each other. For a detailed scheduled of speakers confirmed please follow the Events link below.
Organisers: See-Yu Chan and Andrea Guerrieri D’Amati
People
Academics
Academics associated with the Macroeconomics Reseach Group are:
Marija Vukotic
Co-ordinator
Christine Braun
Deputy Co-ordinator
Research Students
Events
Macro/International Economics Seminar - David Zentler-Munro (Essex)
The title and link for David’s talk will be Rising Wage Inequality: Technological Change and Search Frictions.
Abstract: This paper examines whether labor market frictions can explain the level and growth of the college wage premium in the US. I develop a novel model where both capital skill complementarity and differences in the search frictions faced by college and non-college workers drive the college wage premium. The presence of search frictions, and hence monopsonistic power, provides a range of explanations for rising college premiums not present in competitive models i.e. changes to relative job offer rates, to firm heterogeneity or to bargaining power between education groups. College workers enjoy substantially lower job destruction rates and higher job offer rates than non-college workers, which generates the presence of a significant, and relatively stable, college wage premium in my model. I also find that bargaining strength, as captured by unionization rates, starts off at similar levels for college and non-college workers but declines more severely for non-college workers. This trend explains a substantial portion of the growth in the college wage premium in my baseline model.
David will be visiting the department for this Seminar - Dita Eckardt will be hosting this visit.