JP

Events

Category
Date
Title
Presenter/Location
Details
2026/04/24 Fri
16:30〜18:00
Demographic Challenges and Economic Stagnation in Japan: Facts and Fictions
星岳雄(東京大学)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 106 会議室
2026/04/17 Fri
16:30〜18:00
No place like home? The causal effect of forced relocation from central Addis Ababa (with Gharad Bryan, Tigabu Getahun, and Sarah Winton)【都市経済学研究会、ミクロ経済学・ゲーム理論研究会の共催】
Simon Franklin(Queen Mary University of London)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 106 会議室

Abstract: Do central slums provide essential economic and social benefits to the poor? We collected bespoke data for 5,000 households to study mass forced clearances in Addis Ababa. Evictees were offered alternative subsidized housing further from the center. Exploiting sharp clearance zone boundaries, regression-discontinuity estimates show negative impacts on social networks, but positive impacts on work, earnings, housing quality and environmental amenity. Relocating households close to their ex-ante neighbors eliminates social costs. Slums are not essential: relocation policies can be designed to fully compensate residents, and the sale value of cleared land more than covers the cost.

2026/03/27 Fri
16:30〜18:00
日本の都市化の源流:前近代における都市の発展、規模と分布
高島正憲(関西学院大学)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 106 会議室
2026/02/27 Fri
16:30〜18:00
Optimal minimum wages (with G. Ahlfeldt, T. Seidel, and D. Roth)
Jens Wrona(University of Duisburg-Essen)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 106 会議室
2026/02/05 Thu
17:00〜18:30
TBA
Lester Chan (SUSTech Business School)
本館1階会議室またはオンライン開催
2026/01/29 Thu
17:00〜18:30
TBA
Filippo Massari (University of Bologna)
本館1階会議室またはオンライン開催
2026/01/23 Fri
16:30〜18:00
TBA
朱連明(大阪大学)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 106 会議室
2026/01/08 Thu
17:00〜18:30
Accountable Voting (with Takako Fujiwara-Greve, Yoko Kawada, and Yuta Nakamura)
Noriaki Okamoto (Meiji Gakuin University)
本館1階会議室またはオンライン開催
2025/12/19 Fri
16:30〜18:00
Resale markets for differentiated durable goods: A model of the fashion industry (with Ying Wang)
小西秀男(Boston College)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 106 会議室

Abstract: The global fashion market continues to expand, yet fast fashion items are often discarded prematurely, generating substantial textile waste. Despite the industry’s large environmental footprint, few economic models address the structure of fashion and apparel markets. This paper develops a simple model of a differentiated durable-goods market, extending the CES monopolistic competition framework of Dixit and Stiglitz (1977). Durable goods last multiple periods but degrade over time. Firms introduce new varieties each period, and with free entry the number of varieties is determined endogenously. With an infinitely lived consumers, we analyze the roles of secondary markets. With representative consumers, the option to resell acts as a demand subsidy, lowering new-goods prices, increasing total durable-goods production, reducing product variety, and lowering consumer welfare. With heterogeneous consumers who differ in preferences for new versus second-hand goods, we find that a larger share of second-hand–goods lovers can raise resale prices, lower new-goods prices, reduce product variety, and increase total production. However, with two product types – high-quality durable goods and low-quality perishable goods, we show that a higher share of second-hand–goods lovers raises the resale price of high-quality goods, encouraging new-goods lovers’ demand for high-quality goods. This crowds out low-quality perishable goods and reduces total industry output, and encourages high-quality goods producers to lower price and increase durability, which add additional benefits. Overall, as production shifts toward high-quality durable goods, environmental harm is reduced.

2025/12/18 Thu
16:00〜17:30
Technological Innovation and Bursting Bubbles (with Tomohiro Hirano and Alexis Akira Toda)【マクロ経済学セミナーと共催】
岸慶一(関西大学)
経済研究所 北館1階 N101/102講義室

要旨:We present a macro-finance model with innovation and knowledge spillover. Skilled agents engage in R&D activities (establish firms) or work in the knowledge-intensive sector. Unskilled agents work in the traditional sector. Knowledge spillover from innovations to the two sectors is initially high and uneven (unbalanced growth), but eventually weakens and equalizes (balanced growth). A rational stock bubble (prices exceed fundamentals) necessarily emerges, even though it is expected to burst with regime switching. Despite the inevitable collapse, stock bubbles and technological innovation reinforce each other and lead to permanently higher output and wages because technologies developed during the bubble era prevail.

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