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I am an Associate Professor of Economic Policy at the University of Salerno (Department of Economics and Statistics), Affiliate Professor at the  University of Göttingen (Department of Economics) and Research Fellow at CSEF (Center for Studies in Economics and Finance). I have obtained the National Scientific Qualification ("Abilitazione scientifica nazionale") as Full Professor of Political Economy (13/A1) and Economic Policy (13/A2) in the 2018-2020 round. 

I am also Member of the Advisory Board of the World Scientific Lecture Notes in Economics and Policy book series (LNEP), and Member of the Teaching Board of the Center for Labour and Political Economics (CELPE)

Research interests: Computational economics, Dynamic macroeconomics, Political economy 

Soon presenting my research at

SPECIAL ISSUE INFORMATION

I am serving as Guest Editor for a Special Issue on 

"Dynamic Macroeconomics: Methods, Models and Analysis"

Economies

Economies (ISSN 2227-7099) is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal for the field of development economics and macroeconomics. The journal invites high-level publications. It publishes regular original research papers and reviews. Particular emphasis is placed on applied empirical and analytical work, and theoretical papers with applications. There is no restriction on the maximum length of the papers and publication is immediate upon acceptance, following a fast and thorough review process. For published empirical research the data sets and methodical details (codes) must be provided upon request.

Funded project - PRIN 2022 (Italian Ministry of University and Research)

"Climate Risk Uncertainty" (Prot. 2022H2STF2)

Associated Investigator (w/ G. Angelini and J. Ditzen)

TOTAL BUDGET: EUR 204.439

 

"Being a Bayesian means that your software never barfs"  (Nobel Laureate Paul Romer, 2016).

"We’d rather have Stanley Fischer than a DSGE model, but we’d rather have Stanley Fischer with a DSGE model than without one"  (Larry Christiano et al., 2018)

"So save your predictions, and burn your assumptions"  (Pearl Jam's 'Dance of the Clairvoyants', 2020)