Conference: Tracking International Aid and Investment from Developing and Emerging Economies

Dear colleagues,

We invite submissions of one-page proposals for papers to be presented at our workshop “Tracking International Aid and Investment from Developing and Emerging Economies,” at Heidelberg University in Germany (September 22-23, 2017). Funding is available for 12 participants.

We will  grant pre-launch access to new datasets on georeferenced aid-like activities by China and India to selected researchers.

The submission deadline for the one-page proposals is May 1, 2017. Decisions will be send out on May 4.

Keynote speakers: David Dollar (Brookings Institution), Helen Milner (Princeton University), and Nancy Qian (Northwestern University)

Academic research on international aid and investment has largely focused on OECD countries as primary providers of such financing. In recent years, however, aid-like financial flows and foreign direct investments originating from developing and emerging economies, such as China and India, have become sizable. Proposals may either answer novel questions in economics, political science or other social sciences, or propose methodological advances related to the challenge of tracking developing and emerging countries’ aid and investments. Potential research questions include, but are not limited to:

  • What are the factors influencing emerging donors’ aid and investment flows?
  • What are their economic, political, social and environmental effects?
  • What are the methodological shortcomings of existing datasets and how can these be addressed?
  • Are the datasets made available by AidData and/or Heidelberg University reliable? How does the reliability of these data compare to alternative methods to estimate aid or investment flows from emerging economies?

More information can be found on our website: http://www.uni-heidelberg.de/fakultaeten/wiso/exzellenzinitiative/international_aid.html

Conference: 200 Years of Ricardian Trade Theory

Scientific Conference
“Celebrating 200 Years of Ricardian Trade Theory”
Birth of an Idea, Main Contribution, Modern Times and Impulses for Future Research in Trade Theory

At this international conference, renowned professors in economics present, discuss and reflect on aspects of Ricardian trade theory that goes back to Chapter 7 “On Foreign Trade” in David Ricardo’s ground-breaking book On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation published in 1817. Keynote speakers present their thoughts on (1) the main contribution of Ricardian trade theory, (2) the environment and source of the original idea and (3) the importance of the Ricardian model for the new trade theory and empirical analyses. In (4) a final panel, experts in the field present their thoughts on the future development of trade theory in the light of current developments in societies and trade policy. There will be commentators in each session and enough time for discussion.

Confirmed Active Participants:
Prof. Harris Dellas (University of Berne)
Prof. Jonathan Eaton (Pennsylvania State University)
Prof. Peter Egger (ETH)
Prof. Wilfred J. Ethier (University of Pennsylvania)
Prof. Simon Evenett (University of St. Gallen)
Prof. Carsten Hefeker (University of Siegen)
Prof. Ronald W. Jones (University of Rochester)
Prof. Antonio Loprieno (University of Basel)
Prof. Esteban Rossi-Hansberg (Princeton University)
Prof. Roy J. Ruffin (University of Houston)
Prof. Nicolas Schmitt (Simon Fraser University)
Prof. M. Scott Taylor (University of Calgary)
Prof. Rolf Weder (University of Basel)

Conference Date: May 12, 2017
Deadline for paper submissions: Apr 3, 2017
Deadline for participant registration: Monday, May 1, 2017

 

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Call for Papers: ETSG 2017 Florence 19TH Annual Conference 14-16 September 2017 European University Institute and University of Florence

This is the nineteenth conference in what is now the largest (and friendliest) annual conference on international trade in the world.

ETSG 2017 is being hosted by the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute and the University of Florence (Italy). A website with details about location, hotels, and visa rules will be available.

The deadline to submit an abstract for possible presentation at the next ETSG Conference is FRIDAY APRIL 28, 2017. The Nineteenth Annual Conference of the ETSG will take place in Florence (Italy) on 14-16 September 2017.

Please visit the conference webpage (http://www.etsg.org/conferences/) for more information and submit your abstract on-line at http://www.etsg.org/abstract-for-etsg-conference.html

RIDGE Call for papers: Economic History, Energy and Natural Resources

The Research Institute for Development, Growth and Economics (RIDGE) is pleased to announce a call for papers for the Workshop on Economic History, Energy and Natural Resources to be held in Montevideo, Uruguay, on 26-27 May 2017. The deadline for submission is March 31, 2017 (12 AM ET).

RIDGE invites to send papers to this economic history workshop on all subjects of economic history provided they are particularly concerned with developing regions.

The workshop will be organized in two different sessions: the first one will be open to different topics of economic history, while the second one will focus on energy and natural resources in the economic history of developing regions.

One of the key debates in the field of economic development over the last two decades has been the relationship between the abundance of natural resources and economic development. Some ideas will be discussed: abundant natural resources are non-neutral for economic development; abundance is an endogenous process that responds to technological and institutional conditions, the characteristics of supply and demand, the linkages with other economic sectors, and the incidence of historical conditions; institutional quality is the main factor to deal with abundant natural resources. In this context, energy appears as an indispensable factor to generate wealth and welfare. No human activity is possible without energy use. In addition, to make it accessible and affordable energy sources must be transformed, and this process generates social relations and interaction between societies and their environment.
Diverse sources and forms of energy have been used over time and it has produced historical transitions. The analysis of the specificity of these processes allows us to discuss certain dynamics of economic development and inform us about their sustainability.

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The Scientific Conference of Microfinance and Sustainable Development

The 2017 Annual Intellectual Symposium of Microfinance and Sustainable Development will take place this year on 20th June 2017. The Symposium is held every year in Ottawa, Canada to discuss intellectual research work on Microfinance and Sustainable Development and related domains.

The Conference is organized by ECO-ENA: Economics & ECO-Engineering Associate, Inc.®, Canada

All research work in the field of Microfinance and Sustainable Development and related areas are welcomed to be submitted for evaluation and for potential presentation at  . Deadline for paper submissions is 15th May 2017.

For more details and to register, please visit the conference website below.

http://www.eco-ena.ca/ottawa-conference-2017.html

Call for Papers: Workshop on Political Economy, Rio de Janeiro Brazil, May 22-23 2017

The Research Institute for Development, Growth and Economics (RIDGE) and the LACEA Political Economy Group (PEG) are pleased to announce a call for papers for the RIDGE/LACEA-PEG Workshop on Political Economy to be held at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio), Brazil, on 22-23 May 2017.

The deadline for submission is February 28/02/17

The 2017 meeting will take place in Rio de Janeiro, hosted by PUC-Rio, within the framework of the 2017 RIDGE May Forum along with the following workshops:

  • LACEA Trade, Integration and Growth Network, May 19-20 (Montevideo, Uruguay)
  • RIDGE/LACEA-PEG Workshop on Political Economy, May 22-23 (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
  • Impact Evaluation of Labor Market Policies, May 24-26 (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
  • Public Economics, May 25-26 (Montevideo, Uruguay)
  • Economic History, May 26-27 (Montevideo, Uruguay)

The Political Economy Group of LACEA has held annual meetings since 1998. As in previous years, the 2017 meeting aims to promote the discussion around the connection between economics and politics that is relevant for Latin American and Caribbean economies. The focus of the meeting will be on the connection between economics and political institutions broadly understood, including legislatures, courts, executives, political parties, elections, weakly institutionalized environments, the institutions of federalism and the workings of the public service.

The accepted contributions are expected to be relevant for understanding the most challenging problems of Latin America and Caribbean countries. This allows for papers addressing issues in other regions when those issues are deemed relevant to the Latin American context. Studies of specific Latin American countries, as well as comparative institutional analyses are also welcome. Both theoretical and empirical contributions are welcome. There will be a dedicated discussant for each paper, as well as open floor discussion.

LACEA-PEG co-directors: Ernesto Dal Bó (UC Berkeley) Claudio Ferraz (PUC-Rio) Scientific Committee: Timothy Besley (LSE) Ernesto Dal Bó (UC Berkeley) Claudio Ferraz (PUC-Rio) Frederico Finan (UC Berkeley) Alvaro Forteza (U de la República) Ernesto Stein (IADB)

The RIDGE Forums and LACEA networks aim to favor the spread of high quality research in economics by bringing together top local and regional researchers working on the frontier of knowledge and policymakers. Participants to any workshop are welcome and encouraged to attend the other workshops.

Call for Papers: Conference on Global Production

6-8th December 2017, National University of Singapore

The Global Production Networks Research Centre at the National University of Singapore (GPN@NUS) is pleased to announce that it will host the inaugural interdisciplinary ‘Conference on Global Production’ in December 2017.

This conference is intended to bring together the research community studying fragmented global production systems in a cutting-edge dialogue that is both truly global and genuinely interdisciplinary. The intention is to generate intense and productive conversations across the interconnected domains of theory, empirics, methodology and policy in a conference that is thematically organised as opposed to being structured along disciplinary lines.

Registration timeline

• Submission of paper/session proposals: 1st May 2017.

• Confirmation of acceptance by conference (including provision of acceptance letter, if required): 1st June 2017.

• Payment of non-refundable conference fee by participants: 1st August 2017. The conference fee – which will cover registration costs, lunches, and tea and coffee – will be in the region of US$100/S$150. Further details on the payment process will follow shortly.

For further details, please follow this link.

Call for Papers: The 15th INFINITI Conference on International Finance

A Trinity College Dublin, Monash University & Universitat de València event will be held at the Universitat de València, Valencia, Spain on 12-13 June 2017. Prof Hélène Rey (London Business School) will be a Keynote Speaker.

The submission deadline is on January 31st, 2017

Papers are solicited in all aspects of international financial integration.

More information on the Call for Papers (including guidelines) is available on the website.

6th AIEAA Conference: “Economics and Politics of Migration: Implications for Agriculture and Food”

  • Conference Dates: 15-16 June 2017
  • Abstract submission by authors: February 15, 2017
  • Notification of acceptance to authors: March 17, 2017
  • Authors’ early registration: April 30, 2017
  • Full paper/poster submission: May 26, 2017
  • Authors’ registration deadline: May 31 2017

Two key factors have recently contributed to place migration issues at the centre of the economic and political agenda. Firstly, the weaker economic prospects and the cuts in public spending due to the recession have increasingly contributed to make immigrants be perceived as competitors in the labour market and in the welfare state, rather than as a resource. Secondly, the refugee crisis, with the number of migrants seeking for asylum in Europe reaching a level not experienced since the mid-1990s, creates alarming tensions and un-coordinated reactions by the EU countries, revealing the fragility of EU institutions. What are the implications of this massive flow of migrants for the agricultural and food sector and, more in general, for rural areas both in the origin and destination countries? In the last decades, agriculture and rural areas have represented the main source of job opportunities for international migrants. Evidence of the key role played by migrant workers in keeping the sector competitive and resilient to the changes is solid. In Italy, for example, more than 25% of the agricultural labour force and nearly 70% of the seasonal labour force are represented by migrants. Similar patterns can be detected in other EU countries, such as Spain, France and Greece, as well as in the US. Yet, although migrant labour force has become a structural element of the agricultural sector in several developed countries, it has also occurred at growing and unsustainable social costs. The fact that agriculture often represents the first occupational opportunity for migrants has brought about at the same time problems of immigrants’ exploitation, illegal hiring and other social costs in many rural areas. In Italy for example, more than 30% of the total non-EU migrant workers are irregular, with a salary significantly below the average, extremely limited worker rights and without any kind of social protection. The interaction between migration and poverty – both at origin and destination – is still among the least studied topics in agricultural economics. This is surprising if one considers that migrants are coming mainly from rural areas where poverty is highly concentrated. Moreover, how the migration process affects the socio-economic contexts in the countries of origin is important not only from a social welfare point of view. The increasing market integration and the role of remittance may create externalities and economic growth in the rural areas (for example, by affecting food production, consumption and the rural demand for manufactured goods); as a consequence, the derived economic welfare is expected to influence future migration processes. Similarly, in destination countries, immigrants are contributing to change consumption patterns as well as food habits, by opening shops, restaurants and trade activities.

Economic research on migration has gone well beyond the analysis of the impact of migrants on natives’ wages and employment. Economists have started to analyse the interaction between immigrants and natives, their degree of substitution and/or complementarities, and how native workers, firms and local economies react and adjust to labour supply shocks. Furthermore, there is a wide literature on the effects of migration on education, health and crime, as well as on the political effects of immigrants at origin and destination. The relevance of these topics motivates the need to provide high quality studies also incorporating current knowledge from the economic literature to analyse the economics and politics of migration in rural areas. In this perspective, the sixth AIEAA Conference aims at providing a scientific contribution to these issues by expanding the knowledge base on the fundamental effects of migration, and by promoting a critical debate on the underlying theoretical and methodological issues and policy implications. Specific issues to be addressed include:

  • The effect of migrations on the agricultural labour market;
  • The contribution of foreign workers to agriculture productivity growth;
  • The effect of migration in rural areas;
  • Farms’ adjustment to local labour supply shocks;
  • Migration and poverty condition in the countries of origin;
  • Migration and the changing patterns of food consumption;
  • Migration, climate change and natural disasters;
  • The trade effect of international migrations;
  • The political economy of migration policy;
  • The political outcomes of international migrations;
  • Migration and crime in rural areas.
  • Migration, education and health

AIEAA welcomes the submission of contributions on the topics above. However, the submission of contributions on other agricultural and applied economics topics is encouraged as well

Submissions

Contribution proposals should be submitted in English through the conference website at www.aieaa.org. There are three types of contributions: contributed papers, organized sessions, and posters. Contributed papers Participants intending to present a paper are requested to submit an extended abstract (minimum 1000 words; maximum 1500 words) before February 15, 2017.

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Call for Papers: 8th Annual Conference of the Trade, Integration, and Growth Network (TIGN) Montevideo, Uruguay, May 19-20, 2017

The 8th Annual Conference of the Trade, Integration, and Growth Network (TIGN) will be held in Montevideo, Uruguay, on May 19-20, 2017. This conference is sponsored by the Latin American and Caribbean Economic Association (LACEA), the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the CAF-Development Bank of Latin America (CAF), and the Research Institute for Development, Growth, and Economics (RIDGE) and is hosted by RIDGE. The TIGN conference is a unique event that brings together top researchers and policymakers to discuss recent theoretical and empirical advances in trade and integration and growth broadly defined.

For additional information on this conference and to register and submit a paper please visit:

http://www.iadb.org/en/topics/trade/call-for-papers/home,7302.html