Event Date
We would like to invite you to submit a paper to the second edition of the European Workshop on the Macroeconomic Implications of Migration organized by Banco de España, la Banca d’Italia, the International Migration Economics Chair, the International Macroeconomics Chair, the CEPII and the Global Migration Center at the University of California Davis.
The conference will take place at Banco de España, Madrid, on June 26-27, 2025. Its goal is to promote discussion and dissemination of innovative theoretical and empirical research on the macroeconomic implications of migration.
The organizing committee invites research submissions on topics related (but not limited) to: the labor market impact of (im)migration; the effects of (im)migration on firms’ behavior, productivity, and innovation; the business-cycle behavior of migration and its relation to monetary and fiscal policies; (Internal) migration and its response to different economic shocks and policies; migration and demographic change; the effect of immigration on prices and the housing market; fiscal and public finance implications of (im)migration; the interplay between migration, foreign investment, and trade; post-pandemic migration (internal and international); migration caused by conflict or physical and transition risks related to climate change.
Keynote speakers: Joan Monras (UPF, CREI), Mathilde Muñoz (University of California, Berkeley) and Esteban Rossi-Hansberg (University of Chicago)
Submission guidelines and timetable: submissions of full papers or extended abstracts with main results are expected by March 3rd, 2025. Submissions should be uploaded to this folder. Please note only one paper per person can be submitted. Decisions are expected to be communicated by March 31st, 2025. Authors with accepted papers are expected to make their own travel arrangements. While we do not cover travel expenses, accommodation in Madrid for up to two nights will be covered for presenters.
Organizing Committee: Gaetano Basso (Banca d’Italia), Aitor Lacuesta (Banco de España), Joan Monras (UPF, CREI), Giovanni Peri (University of California, Davis) and Hillel Rapoport (Paris School of Economics).
See the program of the 2024 workshop here.