Paris School of Economics
France
Fabrizio Coricelli mainly focuses on Macroeconomics, Exchange rate, International economics, Transition and Soviet union. His work carried out in the field of Macroeconomics brings together such families of science as Financial market, Phenomenon, Subsidy and Socialist economics. His research integrates issues of Cost–benefit analysis and Inflation in his study of Exchange rate.
He interconnects Monetary policy, Monopolistic competition and Unemployment in the investigation of issues within Inflation. His International economics research includes themes of Present value, Bank credit, Credit crunch and Capital market. The concepts of his Economy study are interwoven with issues in Relative price, Balassa–Samuelson effect and Fixed effects model.
His primary areas of study are Monetary economics, International economics, Inflation, Macroeconomics and Unemployment. His work in the fields of Bond market and Bank credit overlaps with other areas such as Eastern european. His International economics research includes elements of Productivity, Financial capital, Politics and Capital account.
His study in Inflation is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Competition, Relative price, Exchange rate and Price dispersion. His work on Real interest rate is typically connected to Transition as part of general Macroeconomics study, connecting several disciplines of science. His Unemployment study incorporates themes from Monetary policy, Wage, Labour economics and Restructuring.
His scientific interests lie mostly in European integration, Productivity, Monetary economics, Control methods and Per capita. He usually deals with Productivity and limits it to topics linked to Economic integration and Regional integration, Economic policy and Referendum. In his works, he performs multidisciplinary study on Monetary economics and Great recession.
His Bank credit study deals with Bond market intersecting with Trade credit and Market liquidity. His Financial crisis study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Financial system, Convergence and Financial integration. Fabrizio Coricelli integrates many fields, such as Norwegian and International economics, in his works.
His scientific interests lie mostly in European integration, Economic system, Accession, Commonwealth and Economic decline. In his study, Treaty of Rome is strongly linked to Brexit, which falls under the umbrella field of European integration. His Economic system research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Productivity, Economic integration, Economic policy and Regional integration.
Fabrizio Coricelli incorporates Accession and Referendum in his research. As part of his studies on Commonwealth, Fabrizio Coricelli often connects relevant areas like Market economy. His Financial crisis research incorporates themes from Convergence and Financial integration.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Growth in transition: what we know , what we don't, and what we should
Nauro F. Campos;Fabrizio Coricelli.
Journal of Economic Literature (2002)
Economic Growth and Political Integration: Estimating the Benefits from Membership in the European Union Using the Synthetic Counterfactuals Method
Nauro F Campos;Fabrizio Coricelli;Luigi Moretti.
Research Papers in Economics (2014)
Real exchange rate dynamics in transition economies
Fabrizio Coricelli;Boštjan Jazbec.
Structural Change and Economic Dynamics (2004)
Output Collapse in Eastern Europe: The Role of Credit
Guillermo Calvo;Fabrizio Coricelli.
IMF Staff Papers (1993)
Non-linear growth effects of financial development: Does financial integration matter?
Arjana Brezigar Masten;Fabrizio Coricelli;Fabrizio Coricelli;Fabrizio Coricelli;Igor Masten.
Journal of International Money and Finance (2008)
Stabilizing a previously centrally planned economy: Poland 1990
Guillermo A. Calvo;Fabrizio Coricelli.
Economic Policy (1992)
Stagflationary Effects of Stabilization Programs in Reforming Socialist Countries: Enterprise-Side and Household-Side Factors
Guillermo A. Calvo;Fabrizio Coricelli.
The World Bank Economic Review (1992)
Monetary Institutions, Monopolistic Competition, Unionized Labor Markets and Economic Performance*
Fabrizio Coricelli;Alex Cukierman;Alberto Dalmazzo.
The Scandinavian Journal of Economics (2006)
When does leverage hurt productivity growth? A firm-level analysis
Fabrizio Coricelli;Nigel L. Driffield;Sarmistha Pal;Isabelle Roland.
Journal of International Money and Finance (2012)
Institutional integration and economic growth in Europe
Nauro F. Campos;Nauro F. Campos;Fabrizio Coricelli;Fabrizio Coricelli;Luigi Moretti.
Journal of Monetary Economics (2019)
If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.
We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:
University College London
Columbia University
University of Warwick
Tel Aviv University
London School of Economics and Political Science
University of Glasgow
Organisation For Economic Co-Operation and Development
Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies
Williams College
University of Groningen
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
RMIT University
Vanderbilt University
University of Fribourg
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Czech Academy of Sciences
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
New York University
University of Miami
Agricultural Research Service
Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
University of Liverpool
Baylor College of Medicine
Kaiser Permanente
Hobart and William Smith Colleges