The Sapienza Economics Seminars (SES) series was a distinguished joint initiative of the Department of Social Sciences and Economics (DiSSE) and the Department of Economics and Law at Sapienza University of Rome.
From 2021 to 2025, the series offered a curated platform for invited presentations by leading scholars at the forefront of economic research. Seminars were typically held on selected Fridays from 2:00 to 3:00 pm (CET), in a hybrid format designed to encourage wide participation from both local and international audiences.
Starting from the 2025/2026 academic year, SES has been integrated into the DisSES seminar series, hosted by the Department of Social Sciences and Economics, to consolidate Sapienza’s research seminar activities and sustain a vibrant forum for high-level academic exchange.
Scientific Committee: Cristiano Cantore, Giuseppe De Arcangelis, Michele Di Maio, Marco Di Pietro, Joanna Kopinska, Giorgia Marini, Marco Marini, Samuel Nocito, Flaviana Palmisano, Valentina Peruzzi
SES EVENTS 2025
SES EVENTS 2024
Interlocking Directorates and Competition in Banking
Maximal Matchings
SES EVENTS 2023
Immigration and the Skill Premium
Endogenous Uncertainty and the Macroeconomic Impact of Shocks to
Inflation Expectations
SES EVENTS 2022
SES EVENTS 2021
Quality provision in hospital markets with demand inertia: The role of patient expectations
The Economic Impact of Depression Treatment in India
Micromotives and macromoves: Political preferences and internal migration in England and Wales
Health effects of early-life interventions
The labour market costs of motherhood
Forecasting and Stress Testing with Quantile Vector Autoregression
Tree-based model to estimate inequality of opportunity
Trade in services and services for trade: a network analysis (with F. Airoldi and C. Piccardi)
Global Value Chain Participation and the COVID-19 Shock in Italy: A transmission channel or a shelter?
Financial consolidations and the cyclicality of corporate financing (with T. Moreland)
New York, Abu Dhabi, London or Stay Home? Identifying Complex Substitution Patterns in Migration with a Cross-Nested Logit Model