Noteworthy

The Workshop System

Economic History

Econometrics

Financial Economics

Growth and Development

International Economics

Industrial Organization

Labor Economics

Macroeconomics

Mathematical Economics

Microeconomics

Political Economy

Public Economics

Special Topics

Individual Research pages

Department History

Past Conferences

Minneapolis Federal Reserve

 

Past Conferences
Department of Economics

Minnesota Workshop in Macroeconomic Theory
The Minnesota Workshop in Macroeconomic Theory is a workshop on dynamic macroeconomic theory sponsored by the National Science Foundation, the University of Minnesota and the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. It has been held at the University of Minnesota since 2000. Previous to that time the conference took place at Northwestern University.
Recurring conference held at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Minnesota Applied Micro Workshop
 
The first Midwest Mathematical Economics Meeting, organized by Rich Kihlstrom in collaboration with Len Mirman and Andy Postlewaite, was held in 1974, starting a tradition that continues to this day, with conferences twice each year. Since 1981 the Meetings have been held in conjunction with those of the Mid-West International Economics Group. Increasingly popular, these meetings attract many of the profession's top researchers, not just from the Midwest, but from both coasts and abroad. We hope you will join us this April. Watch this site for additional information.
MTITM Spring 2007
Perspectives on Leo Hurwicz A gathering to Honor Leo Hurwicz for his
contributions to the profession of economics.

In the past thirty years, macroeconomics has undergone a radical transformation. Its tools were then primarily empirical as researchers analyzed the properties of large-scale forecasting models, as applied to aggregate data. Its focus was largely on monetary and fiscal policy, and their impact on inflation, unemployment, and Gross National Product.

Now, macroeconomists use a robust blend of sophisticated theory and rich data analyses. Their scope of research has exploded. Macroeconomic research is now a huge part of labor economics, political economy, international trade, and industrial organization. Macroeconomics is no longer a field unto itself, but a way of thinking that can attack problems of interest in all fields.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and the University of the Minnesota have been at the forefront of this transformation. The aim of the conference was to bring together frontier work in this larger vision of macroeconomics.

The 2006 North American Summer Meeting of
The Econometric Society
The 2006 North American Summer Meeting of the Econometric Society was hosted by the Economics Department of the University of Minnesota at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota from June 22 to June 25 2006.
In 1978, John Kareken and Neil Wallace of the University of Minnesota organized a conference on monetary economics at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. The conference proceedings were published as a book by the Bank under the title of “Models of Monetary Economies”. Most of the articles, and many of the discussions of the articles, became instant classics. “Models of Monetary Economies” set the agenda and terms of discussion for monetary economics over the next quarter century.

On May 21-22, 2004, the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and the University of Minnesota hosted a follow-up conference, “Models of Monetary Economies II: The Next Generation.” The agenda for the conference is described in its title: to present the latest developments in theoretical monetary economics. The conference organizers were Narayana Kocherlakota, Stanford University, and Randall Wright, University of Pennsylvania.

Models of Monetary Economies II:
The Next Generation

First Conference on Neuroscience and Economics
(Neuroeconomics)
University of Minnesota

Friday, October 25 - Sunday,October 27, 2002

The Brain
Minneapolis by Night

Spring 2002 NBER Conference on
General Equilibrium Theory

University of Minnesota

May 10 - May 12, 2002

 
a wavy line

July 16, 2007

The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer.
© 2005 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota