Keynote Speakers

Guido Imbens (IAAE Lecture)

Guido Imbens is The Applied Econometrics Professor and Professor of Economics at Stanford Graduate School of Business. After graduating from Brown University Guido taught at Harvard University, UCLA, and UC Berkeley. He joined Stanford GSB in 2012. Imbens specializes in econometrics, and in particular methods for drawing causal inferences. Guido Imbens is a fellow of the Econometric Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2021, Imbens was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences jointly with Joshua Angrist “for their methodological contributions to the analysis of causal relationships.”

https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/faculty-research/faculty/guido-w-imbens

Anna Mikusheva (IAAE Lecture)

Anna Mikusheva is a Professor of Economics at MIT where she has been a member of the faculty in the Department of Economics since 2007. Professor Mikusheva’s research aims to create new econometric procedures that work in a robust way when standard asymptotic approaches fail. She is interested in settings and applications where weak identification is present. She has also written extensively about inference for persistent (unit root) data. Professor Mikusheva holds a PhD in Economics from Harvard University and a PhD in Probability from Moscow State University.

https://economics.mit.edu/people/faculty/anna-mikusheva 

Isaiah Andrews (Keynote Speaker)

Isaiah Andrews is Professor of Economics at MIT and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. He is also a co-editor of the American Economic Review. Much of Andrew’s research is in the field of econometrics, and concerns instrumental variables. His research concerns situations in which either the relevance condition or the exclusion restriction hold only weakly. In 2021, he was awarded the John Bates Clark Medal by the American Economic Association.

https://economics.mit.edu/people/faculty/isaiah-andrews 

Bruce E. Hansen (JAE Lecture)

Bruce Hansen is the Phipps Distinguished Chair of Economics at the University of Wisconsin. He was Co-Editor of Econometric Theory during 1995-2008 and Associate Editor of Econometrica for the period 1996-2008. He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society and the Journal of Econometrics. His current interests include exact distribution theory, clustered dependence, GMM, and model misspecification. His online PhD-level econometrics textbook is widely used for PhD-level teaching, reference, and individual education.

https://econ.wisc.edu/staff/hansen-bruce/ 

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