International Macro History Online Seminars

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Date / time
08/10/2025 - 17/12/2025, 5:00 pm - 6:15 pm

The Fall 2025 sessions of the International Macro History Online Seminar will run from 10 September to 17 December and will take place virtually, bi-weekly on Wednesdays at 17:00 (Geneva time). The seminars will run for 60 minutes with an extra optional 15 minutes for further discussion.

The programme is as follows:

  • IMHOS 97- 10 September 2025: Thomas Zeiler (University of Colorado Boulder), “Beyond the Nixon Shocks“. Chair: Nathan Sussman (Geneva Graduate Institute and CEPR)
  • IMHOS 98- 24 September 2025: Eva Mulder (Erasmus University Rotterdam) with Peter Koudijs, “Holding Bankers Liable: Personal Guarantees and Risk- taking in Security Underwriting“. Chair: Caroline Fohlin (Emory University)
  • IMHOS 99 – 8 October 2025: Francesco Molteni (European University Institute), “International Banking Flows and Financial Crises”. Chair: Catherine Schenk (University of Oxford)
  • IMHOS 100 – 22 October 2025: Panel on “Geoeconomics” with Dale Copeland (University of Virginia) and Jesse Schreger (Colombia Business School) and Christoph Trebesch (Kiel Institute and CEPR). Chair: Kris Mitchener (Santa Clara University).
  • IMHOS 101- 5 November 2025: Aditi Sahasrabuddhe (Brown University) with Jack Seddon, ” The Perils of Technocratic Power: Central Bank Discretion and the End of Bretton Woods Revisited”. Chair: Stefano Battilossi (Universidad Carlos III Madrid).
  • IMHOS 102- 19 November 2025: Monique Reiske (Humboldt University Berlin) with Thilo Nils Hendrik Albers and Felix Kersting, “The Political Costs of Debt Deflation: Agricultural Crises and the Rise of the Nazi Party”. Chair: Emilie Sartre (University of Nottingham)
  • IMHOS 103- 3 December 2025: Cameron LaPoint (Yale University) with Gustavo Cortes, “Housing is the Financial Cycle: Evidence from 100 years of Local Building Permits”.
  • IMHOS 104- 17 December 2025: Christopher Meissner (University of California, Davis) with Alex Klein, “Did Tariffs Make US Manufacturing Great? New Evidence from the Gilded Age”. Chair: Rui Esteves (Geneva Graduate Institute and CEPR)
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