Skip to main content

Conference on International Trade and Structural Change

March 13, 2020 | This conference has been postponed. 
Location: UC San Diego’s Social Sciences Building room 107

Overview

This conference on international trade and structural change is a part of a series of small, high-quality research seminars jointly sponsored by UC San Diego and UCLA. The conference covers topics from the fields of trade, migration, spatial economics and real-side macroeconomics.

Papers

"Trade, Jobs, and Worker Welfare"
Eunhee Lee, University of Maryland (Co-Authors: E. Artuc and P. Bastos)

Maximiliano Dvorkin, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

"Where Do the Data Come From? Endogenous Classification in Administrative Data"
Matthew Grant, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research/SIEPR

"A Revealed-Preference Approach to Measuring Information Frictions in Migration Decisions"
Eduardo Morales, Princeton University (Co-Authors: T. Fujiwara and C. Porcher)

Conference Agenda

Location: UC San Diego’s Social Sciences Building room 107

9–9:30 a.m. – Registration and Breakfast

9:30–10:45 a.m. – "Trade, Jobs, and Worker Welfare", Eunhee Lee, University of Maryland (Co-Authors: E. Artuc and P. Bastos)

10:45–11:15 a.m. – Coffee Break

11:15 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Maximiliano Dvorkin, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

12:30–2 p.m. – Lunch

2–3:15 p.m. –  "Where Do the Data Come From? Endogenous Classification in Administrative Data", Matthew Grant, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research/SIEPR

3:15–3:45 p.m. – Coffee Break

3:35–5 p.m. – "A Revealed-Preference Approach to Measuring Information Frictions in Migration Decisions," Eduardo Morales, Princeton University (Co-Authors: T. Fujiwara and C. Porcher)

6–8 p.m. – Dinner

Attendance

This conference is open to invited speakers and guests, and faculty and students in the School of Global Policy and Strategy, Department of Economics and Department of Political Science.