Grants
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014, 2015
Modeling Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis - A Dynamical Systems Approach
This research project improves the mathematical capabilities of non-Neoclassical economics and uses modern techniques from nonlinear dynamical systems to model the expansion and contraction of credit and its effect on real economic output and asset prices.
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014, 2015
Statistical Physics Approach to Income and Wealth Distribution
This research project employs ideas from statistical physics to deal with income and wealth inequality, financial instability, and the distribution of energy consumption around the world.
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014, 2015
New-Style Central Banking
This research project investigates the impact of the new style of central banking on the bank’s solvency, its ability to control inflation, and on economic stability.
-
Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
Analytical Aspects of Real-Financial Linkages in Systems of Heterogeneous Agents
This research project builds a new generation of models fit to analyze and manage the challenges of governing globalized and interconnected economies.
-
Years granted:
2011, 2013, 2014, 2015
Finance and the Welfare of Nations: The View from Economic History
This research project combines 140 years of economic history with state-of-the-art econometric methods to gain new insights into the relationship between finance, growth, and crises.
-
Years granted:
2011, 2013, 2014, 2015
Knightian Uncertainty, Informational Inefficiency and Financial Markets
This research project examines the informational inefficiency of market prices in the presence of Knightian uncertainty or ambiguity by modeling the decision making of financial market traders.
-
Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014
Voter and Consumer Behavior toward Energy Policy through the Lens of New Behavioral Paradigms: A Path to a Sustainable Economy?
This research project discovers how real people, not just the abstractions of traditional economic theory, respond to various possible policy interventions aimed to bring climate change under control and thus which policies will have the biggest impact.
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014
Contagion of Sentiment, Investor Trading Activities, and Financial Crises
This research project studies the pricing and liquidity implications of sentiment and disagreement as origins of radical uncertainty in financial markets.
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014
Managing Uncertainty: An Anthropology of Financialization in post-Mao China
This research project develops a new field of anthropology: the anthropology of financialization, focusing on China and two main institutions of financialization, management consultancies and fund managers.
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014
Countervailing Monetary Power: Emerging Markets and the Re-Regulation of Cross-Border Finance
This resarch project examines the economic theory, policy, and international political economy of cross border finance in the run up to and in the wake of the global financial crisis of 2008.
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014
A Theory of Financial Market Instability Even Under Perfect Conditions: Bubbles and Crashes in Rational Belief Equilibrium
This research project seeks to develop a theory of how bubbles and crashes can arise even when all agents are rational, informed, and trading in perfect markets.
-
Years granted:
2013, 2014
Dynamic Contagion Mechanisms in Financial Networks
This research project develops a novel framework to capture both instantaneous and dynamic contagion mechanisms arising in financial networks when balance sheet linkages across entities exist.
-
Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014
Correlations in Complex Heterogeneous Networks
This research project uses statistical physics and network analysis to understand and explain the contagion and panic effects associated with crises that are unexplained in standard economic models.
-
Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014
A Network-Based Analysis of Financial Markets
This research project explores the sources of and remedies for financial instability as well as the relationship between traders’ choice of a price-setting mechanism and market structure and the relationship between market freezes and the amount of intermediation in the market.
-
Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014
Free from What? Evolving Notions of 'Market Freedom' in the History and Contemporary Practice of US Antitrust Law and Economics
This research project investigates the reasons behind the US financial crisis by applying the tools of the history of economic thought to the postwar evolution of US antitrust law and economic