Ph.D. Gabriel FELBERMAYR President, Kiel Institute for the World Economy, Kiel
CV
2000-2004 | Doctoral Studies in Economics, EUI - European University Institute, Florence |
2003-2004 | Assistant Professor, Institute for Economics, Johannes Kepler University of Linz |
2004-2005 | Associate Consultant, McKinsey & Company, Vienna |
2005-2008 | Assistant Professor, Chair of International Economic Relations (Prof. Dr. Wilhelm Kohler), Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen |
2008 | Habilitation, Eberhard Karls University, Tübingen |
2008-2011 | Professor for Economics, esp. International Economics, University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart |
2010-2019 | Director, IFO - Center for International Economics, Munich |
2011-2019 | Professor for Economics, esp. International Economics, Chair for international trade and international finance, Faculty of Economics, University of Munich |
since 2019 | President, Kiel Institute for the World Economy |
Professor, Christian-Albrechts-University,Kiel |
Mitgliedschaften
Member of Scientific Advisory Board of the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Energy | |
Associate Editor, European Economic Review | |
Associate Editor, Journal of the European Economic Associaton |
Publikationen
Gabriel Felbermayr,”Zur Rückkehr der Machtpolitik in Handelsfragen: Theoretische Überlegungen und politische Empfehlungen“, Perspektiven der Wirtschaftspolitik, 2019, 19(3), 232-244 | |
Gabriel Felbermayr (with Giammario Impullitti and Julien Prat), "Firm Dynamics and Residual Inequality in Open Economies", Journal of the European Economic Association, 2018, 16(5), 1476-1539 , | |
Gabriel Felbermayr (with Michele Battisti, Giovanni Peri and Panu Poutvaara), "Immigration, Search, and Redistribution: A Quantitative Assessment of Native Welfare", Journal of the European Economic Association, 2018, 16(4), 1137-1188 | |
Gabriel Felbermayr (with Benjamin Jung and Mario Larch), "Optimal Tariffs, Retaliation and the Welfare Loss from Tariff Wars in the Melitz Model", Journal of International Economics, 2013, 89 (1), 13–25 |