Associate Professor, Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Salerno (Italy)
Affiliate Professor, Department of Economics, University of Göttingen (Germany)
Research Fellow, Center for Studies in Economics and Finance (CSEF)
Advisory Board Member, World Scientific Lecture Notes in Economics and Policy Book Series (LNEP)
Associate Editor, Discover Analytics (Springer Nature)
Editorial Board Member, PLoS One (PLOS)
Research interests: Computational economics, Dynamic macroeconomics, Political economy, Decision making under uncertainty
Angelini G., Bontempi M. E., De Angelis L., Neri P. and Sorge M. M. (2025)
"Shocking concerns: public perception about climate change and the macroeconomy".
hosted on
https://www.policyuncertainty.com/index.html
(Research Directors: Scott R. Baker, Nick Bloom and Steven J. Davis)
Lectures on Dynamic Macroeconomics: Methods and Applications
(with C. Dave)
World Scientific Lecture Notes in Economics and Policy,
Vol. 24, ISBN: 9789811296208 (2025)
National Scientific Habilitation (ASN) for Full Professorship
13/A1 (Economia Politica), 13/A2 (Politica Economica), since 11/2020
RESEARCH GRANT - 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
Soon presenting my research at
5th Sailing the Macro Workshop (U Sapienza)
2nd Workshop on "Climate Risk Uncertainty" (U Bologna)
SPECIAL ISSUE INFORMATION
I am serving as Guest Editor for a Special Issue on
"Dynamic Macroeconomics: Methods, Models and Analysis"
Economies (ISSN 2227-7099) -IF 2024: 2.1
"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)
"If the children of Noah had been able and willing to pool risks [...] among themselves and their descendants, then the vast inequality we see today, within and across societies, would not exist." (Robert E. Lucas Jr, 1992)