Associate Professor in Economics, IBSS – Xi’an Jiaotong–Liverpool University (XJTLU)
I am an Associate Professor in Economics at the International Business School Suzhou, Xi’an Jiaotong–Liverpool University (XJTLU). I also hold honorary appointments at Middlesex University and the University of Liverpool.
Previously, I was a permanent Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) in the Department of Economics at Middlesex University London, where I co-led the Decision-Making for Policy (DEMAP) research group. I also served as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics and Finance at LUISS University in Rome, and I have experience in industry and consultancy.
My research lies in experimental and behavioural economics, with a focus on organizational behaviour, decision-making in groups, fraud, and cooperation.
I hold a PhD in Economics, Management and Organization (DEMO program) and an MPhil from Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, as well as an MA in International Business Economics from Bayes Business School, City, University of London.
For more information on my research and teaching, please contact me at:
📧 andrej.angelovski@xjtlu.edu.cn | a.angelovski@mdx.ac.uk
Publications
"Trust Among Corrupt Collaborators? Experimentally Testing the Villain’s Paradox” (with Giulia Andrighetto, Daniela di Cagno, Francesca Marazzi, and Aron Szekely)
Experimental Economics
"When Efficient Help is Seen as Greed: Experimental Evidence", (2025) 1-17. (with Werner Güth, Simon Lodato and Christos Mavridis)
Public Choice
"Deciding for Others: Local Public Good Contributions with Intermediaries", 102247. (2024). (with Praveen Kujal, and Christos Mavridis)
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
"Equal and Unequal Profit Sharing in Highly Interdependent Work Groups: A Laboratory Experiment", 184, (2021), 232-252. (with Jordi Brandts, and Carles Solà)
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
"When to Stop? A Cardinal Secretary Search Experiment", (2020), 98, 102425. (with Werner Güth)
Journal of Mathematical Psychology
"Do Investors Rely on Robots? Evidence from an Experimental Study",(2020), 7. (with Barbara Alemanni, Daniela Di Cagno, Arianna Galliera, Nadia Lincano, and Francesca Marazzi)
CONSOB Fintech Series
"Rank-Order Competition in the Voluntary Provision of Impure Public Goods", (2019), 57(4), 2163-2183. (with Tibor Neugebauer, and Maroš Servátka)
Economic Inquiry
"Trusting Versus Monitoring: An Experiment of Endogenous Institutional Choices", (2019), 1-27. (with Daniela Di Cagno, Daniela Grieco, and Werner Güth)
Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review
"Telling the Other What One Knows? An Acquiring-a-Company Experiment with Two-Sided Private Information", (2019), online version https://doi.org/10.1007/s11238-019-09715-6. (with Daniela Di Cagno, Werner Güth, and Francesca Marazzi)
Theory and Decision
“Partial Versus General Compulsory Solidarity: an Experimental Analysis”, (2019), 34, 249-279. (with Arianna Galliera, Werner Güth)
Homo Oeconomicus
“Behavioral Spillovers in Local Public Good Provision: An Experimental Study”, 67, (2018), 116-134. (with Daniela Di Cagno, Werner Güth, Luca Pannacione, and Francesca Marazzi)
Journal of Economic Psychology
"Does Heterogeneity Spoil the Basket? The Role of Productivity and Feedback Information on Public Good Provision in Neighborhood Experiments", 77, (2018), 40-49. (with Daniela Di Cagno, Werner Güth, Luca Pannacione, and Francesca Marazzi)
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
“Hiring and Escalation Bias in Subjective Performance Evaluations: A Laboratory Experiment”, 121, (2016), 114-129. (with Jordi Brandts, and Carles Solà)
Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization
Working Papers
"Communication Structure and the Provision of Intergroup Public Goods" (with Ernesto Reuben)
"Bidding for Better Jobs: An Experiment on Gender Differences in Competitiveness without a Real-Effort Task" (with Jordi Brandts, and Werner Güth)
“A Friend in Need is a Friend Indeed: Social Responsibility and Political Preferences” (with Ariana Galliera and Francesca Marazzi)
“Meritocracy vs. Semi-meritocracy: Property Rights and Charitable Giving” (with Praveen Kujal and José María Ortiz)