North American Winter Meeting
The 2007 joint meeting with the American Economic Association will be held in Chicago, Illinois, January 5-7, 2007, as part of the Allied Social Science Association Meeting. The program will consist primarily of contributed papers. The program committee will be co-chaired by Timothy Kehoe of the University of Minnesota and Antonio Merlo of the University of Pennsylvania.
Prospective contributors are invited to submit titles and abstracts of their papers before April 28, 2006. All abstracts are required to be submitted electronically as plain text at the conference website: http://www.econometricsociety.org/conference/NAWM2007.
At least one co-author must be a member of the Society or must join prior to submission. This can be done at www.econometricsociety.org.
Submitted abstracts should not be over 300 words in length. Each person may submit only one paper, or be a co-author on multiple submissions provided that if all such papers were accepted, no person would present more than one paper. Abstracts should represent original manuscripts not previously presented to any Econometric Society regional meeting or submitted to other professional organizations for presentation at these same meetings. The following information should also be provided electronically at the time of submission: the authors' names, affiliations, complete addresses, telephone and fax numbers; both the email addresses and web sites (if any) of the submitters; the JEL primary field name and number; and the paper title.
Program Committee
Timothy J. Kehoe, University of Minnesota, Co-chair
Antonio Merlo, University of Pennsylvania, Co-chair
Caroline M. Betts, University of Southern California, international trade, international finance
Russell W. Cooper, University of Texas at Austin, applied macroeconomics, public economics
Robert C. Feenstra, University of California Davis, international trade
Andrew Foster, Brown University, economic development, environmental economics
Philip Haile, Yale University, industrial organization, applied econometrics
Thomas J. Holmes, University of Minnesota, industrial organization, urban economics
Patrick J. Kehoe, University of Minnesota, international macroeconomics
Yuichi Kitamura, Yale University, econometrics
Nobu Kiyotaki, Princeton University, monetary economics
Robert E. Lucas, Jr., University of Chicago, macroeconomics
Erzo G. J. Luttmer, University of Minnesota, finance, time series econometrics
George J. Mailath, University of Pennsylvania, game theory, economic theory
Ellen R. McGrattan, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, macroeconomics, applied general equilibrium
Enrique G. Mendoza, University of Maryland, international macroeconomics, international finance
Stephen Morris, Princeton University, game theory, finance
Thomas R. Palfrey, Princeton University, political economy, experimental economics
Fabrizio Perri, New York University, international macroeconomics, general equilibrium theory
José-Víctor Ríos-Rull, University of Pennsylvania, macroeconomics, population economics
Jean-Marc Robin, Université de Paris I and University College London, labor economics, applied econometrics
Richard Rogerson, Arizona State University, macroeconomics, labor economics
John Rust, University of Maryland, applied microeconomics
Petra Todd, University of Pennsylvania, labor economics, development economics