I am a Financial Stability Expert at the European Central Bank and an adjunct lecturer at Goethe University Frankfurt.
I hold a Ph.D. in economics from Freie Universität Berlin and the John F. Kennedy Institute. My research interests lie at the intersection of macro-finance, quantitative economic history, and financial stability. I am particularly interested in the history and prediction of banking crises.
At the European Central Bank, I work on the interactions between financial stability and monetary policy, house prices, household inequality and geopolitical risk. You find my policy work here.
With a double background in economics and computer science, I previously worked for central banks, in the finance industry, and for start-ups employing econometric methods, data science, and network analysis. Research stays led me to Cornell University, to the Bank of Israel, and to the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET).
I teach classes on money and banking, financial history and financial crises.
You can find my CV here.
I am an affiliated researcher at the Quantitative Financial History Lab at Georgetown University and a contributor to the Historical Banking Crises Database.
Contact: dieckelmann@gsnas.fu-berlin.de