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Seminar: International Trade in Macro-Financial Modelling

2nd year Ph.D./MSQE seminar (6 CP, Macroeconomics)

Kickoff: April 23, 2025
Last meeting: July 09, 2025
Venue: see schedule

Find a detailed scheduled of times and locations on QiS or as a PDF as well as the syllabus (PDF).

The purpose of this seminar is to give advanced doctoral students a hands-on introduction to frontier research in structural macroeconomic analysis in the area of international trade. The students should be able to replicate an existing structural model, present the research objective and the model of a paper, and get an overview of literature in this area of research. At the end of the seminar, students should be able to start working on a dissertation project that involves structural macroeconomic modeling.

Teaching Assistants: Jan Herrmann (HoF 4.50) and Maximilian Vilt (HoF 4.57)

Registration: Please send an e-mail to Jan Herrmann (herrmann@imfs-frankfurt.de) to confirm that you wish to obtain information and whether you will take this seminar for credit. Please include your matriculation number, student status (Ph.D. or MSQE), year of study and full name. Please note that in order to obtain credit points for the seminar, it is also required to register for the course at the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

2nd year Ph.D./MSQE field course (6 CP, Macroeconomics) 

First lecture: Monday, October 23, 2023
Last lecture: Thursday, December 14, 2023
Exam date: tbd
Venue: Lectures: HoF E.01 (Deutsche Bank); Exercise sessions: HoF E.01 (Deutsche Bank) / HoF 2.45 (Boston)

The lectures are scheduled to take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10:00-12:00.

Exercise sessions take place on Thursdays from 10:00-12:00. A detailed schedule can be found on QiS or as a PDF.

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the analysis of monetary and fiscal policy making with practical applications to current policy challenges. Examples from the European Union, the United States and Japan will be discussed. We will develop models of monetary and fiscal policy and learn how different policy recommendations can be evaluated using these models. Students will conduct practical simulation exercises and make use of MATLAB-based software tools for model analysis. Furthermore, modelling approaches of Covid19 as well as fiscal policy during pandemics are studied.

Teaching Assistant: Hendrik Hegemann (HoF 4.57)

Registration: Please send an e-mail to Mr. Hendrik Hegemann (hegemann@imfs-frankfurt.de) to confirm that you wish to obtain course information and whether you will take this course for credit. Please include your matriculation number, student status (Ph.D. or MSQE), year of study and full name. Please note that in order to obtain credit points for the course, it is also required to register for the course at the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd year Ph.D./MSQE field course (6 CP, Macroeconomics)

First lecture: Monday, October 17, 2022
Last lecture: Thursday, December 15, 2022
Exam date: tbd
Venue: Lectures: HoF E.01 (Deutsche Bank); Exercise sessions: HoF E.20 (DZ Bank)

The lectures are scheduled to take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10:00-12:00.

Exercise sessions take place on Thursdays from 14:00-16:00. A detailed schedule can be found on QiS or as a PDF.

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the analysis of monetary and fiscal policy making with practical applications to current policy challenges. Examples from the European Union, the United States and Japan will be discussed. We will develop models of monetary and fiscal policy and learn how different policy recommendations can be evaluated using these models. Students will conduct practical simulation exercises and make use of MATLAB-based software tools for model analysis. Furthermore, modelling approaches of Covid19 as well as fiscal policy during pandemics are studied.

Teaching Assistant: Hendrik Hegemann (HoF 4.57)

Registration: Please send an e-mail to Mr. Hendrik Hegemann (hegemann@imfs-frankfurt.de) to confirm that you wish to obtain course information and whether you will take this course for credit. Please include your matriculation number, student status (Ph.D. or MSQE), year of study and full name. Please note that in order to obtain credit points for the course, it is also required to register for the course at the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Ph.D. Program Seminar
Macro-Financial Modeling and the Coronavirus Pandemic

Description: 


The purpose of this seminar is to give advanced doctoral students a hands-on introduction to frontier research in structural macroeconomic analysis and the development and application of structural macroeconomic models. The seminar will consist of a combination of lectures, supervision of modeling projects, student presentations and group discussions with extensive feedback. Each project, which should ideally be pursued by a team of two students, will involve studying an existing macroeconomic model from the literature (a list of suggestions will be provided before the course starts). Students will then be guided in the development of a software implementation of the model in DYNARE with a policy application. At the end of the seminar, students should be able to start working on a dissertation project that involves structural macroeconomic modeling. Successful participation in this seminar is a precondition for the supervision of a dissertation at the chair.


Time and Location:

Meetings will be held in person.
Introductory meeting: April 11, 2022, 11:00-12:00 in room HoF 1.28 (Shanghai)


Registration: 


To register for the course, students need to send an e-mail to Alexander Dück (dueck@imfs-frankfurt.de). Please include your matriculation number, student status, year of study and full name. Registration should take place as soon as possible. The maximum number of participants in the seminar for credit will need to be restricted to twelve. The maximum number of students participating in the seminar for credit will need to be restricted to twelve. In case of more registrations, the first twelve students who sent their contacts to Alexander Dück can take the seminar for credits. You also need to register with the GSEFM Office of Academic Records..

Requirements:


Students will be expected to give two short presentations for group feedback. The first presentation will explain the assigned paper from the literature and modeling project. It will take place in the middle of the semester. The second presentation, at the end of the semester, will report on the implemented model and policy applications. Grading will be based on presentations and model implementation.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd year Ph.D./MSQE field course (4 CP, Macroeconomics)

First lecture: Monday, December 13, 2021
Last lecture: Monday, February 14, 2022
Exam date: tbd
Venue: tbd

The lectures are scheduled to take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10:00-12:00.

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the analysis of monetary and fiscal policy making with practical applications to current policy challenges. Examples from the European Union, the United States and Japan will be discussed. We will develop models of monetary and fiscal policy and learn how different policy recommendations can be evaluated using these models. Students will conduct practical simulation exercises and make use of MATLAB-based software tools for model analysis. Furthermore, modelling approaches of Covid19 as well as fiscal policy during pandemics are studied.

Teaching Assistant: KaiLong Liu (HoF 4.57)

Registration: Please send an e-mail to KaiLong Liu (liu@imfs-frankfurt.de) to confirm that you wish to obtain course information and whether you will take this course for credit. Please include your matriculation number, student status (Ph.D. or MSQE), year of study and full name. Please note that in order to obtain credit points for the course, it is also required to register for the course at the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Ph.D. Program Seminar: Macro-Financial Modeling and the Coronavirus Pandemic

Description:

The purpose of this seminar is to give advanced doctoral students a hands-on introduction to frontier research in structural macroeconomic analysis and the development and application of structural macroeconomic models. The seminar will consist of a combination of lectures, supervision of modeling projects, student presentations and group discussions with extensive feedback. Each project, which should ideally be pursued by a team of two students, will involve studying an existing macroeconomic model from the literature (a list of suggestions will be provided before the course starts). Students will then be guided in the development of a software implementation of the model in DYNARE with a policy application. At the end of the seminar, students should be able to start working on a dissertation project that involves structural macroeconomic modeling. Successful participation in this seminar is a precondition for the supervision of a dissertation at the chair.

Time and Location:

Meetings will be held in person or online via 'zoom'. The introductory meeting will take place on Monday, 12th of April, 11:00 am-12:00 noon. The detailed schedule of the seminar can be seen here.

Registration:

To register for the course, students need to send an e-mail to Alexander Dück (dueck@imfs-frankfurt.de). Please include your matriculation number, student status, year of study and full name. Registration should take place as soon as possible. The maximum number of participants in the seminar for credit will need to be restricted to twelve. The maximum number of students participating in the seminar for credit will need to be restricted to twelve. In case of more registrations, the first twelve students who sent their contacts to Alexander Dück can take the seminar for credits. You also need to register with the GSEFM Office of Academic Records..

Requirements:

Students will be expected to give two short presentations for group feedback. The first presentation will explain the assigned paper from the literature and modeling project. It will take place in the middle of the semester. The second presentation, at the end of the semester, will report on the implemented model and policy applications. Grading will be based on presentations and model implementation.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd year Ph.D./MSQE field course (4 CP, Macroeconomics)

First lecture: Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Last lecture: Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Exam date: tbd

The lectures are scheduled to take place on Mondays from 10:00-12:00 in room "Deutsche Bank" (E.01, House of Finance) and on Wednesdays from 10:00-12:00 in room "Dubai" (1.27, House of Finance). The detailed schedule and non-regular classes are available in the university course overview or can be downloaded here.

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the analysis of monetary and fiscal policy making with practical applications to current policy challenges. Examples from the European Union, the United States and Japan will be discussed. We will develop models of monetary and fiscal policy and learn how different policy recommendations can be evaluated using these models. Students will conduct practical simulation exercises and make use of MATLAB-based software tools for model analysis. Furthermore, modelling approaches of Covid19 as well as fiscal policy during pandemics are studied.

For further details please have a look into the (preliminary) syllabus.  

Teaching Assistant: Alexander Dück (HoF 4.50)

Registration: Please send an e-mail to Alexander Dück (alexander.dueck@hof.uni-frankfurt.de) to confirm that you wish to obtain course information and whether you will take this course for credit. Please include your matriculation number, student status (Ph.D. or MSQE), year of study and full name. Please note that in order to obtain credit points for the course it is also required to register for the course at the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Ph.D. Program Seminar: Macro-Financial Modeling and the Coronavirus Pandemic

Description:

The purpose of this seminar is to give advanced doctoral students a hands-on introduction to developments and applications of structural macroeconomic models. The seminar will consist of a combination of lectures, supervision of modeling projects, student presentations and group discussions with extensive feedback. Each project, which should ideally be pursued by a team of two students, will involve studying an existing macroeconomic model from the literature, with a particular emphasis on the economic effects of the Coronavirus COVID-19 and appropriate macroeconomic policy responses. Students will be subsequently guided through the replication of the model in DYNARE and its implementation in the MMB. At the end of the seminar, students should be able to start working on a dissertation project that involves structural macroeconomic modeling. Successful participation in this seminar is a precondition for the supervision of a dissertation at the chair.

Time and Location:

Lectures will be held via online platforms, unless stated otherwise. The introductory online meeting will take place on Monday, 20th of April, 11:00 am-12:00 noon.

Registration:

To register for the seminar, students should send an e-mail to Lazar Milivojevic (lazar.milivojevic@hof.uni-frankfurt.de). Please include your matriculation number, student status, year of study and full name. Registration should take place as soon as possible. The maximum number of participants in the seminar for credit will need to be restricted to twelve.

Requirements:

Students will be expected to give two short presentations for group feedback. The first presentation will explain the assigned paper from the literature and modeling project. It will take place in the middle of the semester. The second presentation, at the end of the semester, will report on the implemented model and policy applications. Grading will be based on presentations and model implementation.

Literature:

  • Atkeson, A., 2020. What will be the economic impact of COVID-19 in the US? Rough estimates of disease scenarios (No. w26867). National Bureau of Economic Research.
  • Binder, M., Lieberknecht, P., Quintana, J. and Wieland, V., 2019. Model uncertainty in macroeconomics: On the implications of financial frictions. In David G. Mayes, Pierre L. Siklos, and Jan-Egbert Sturm (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Central Banking, Oxford: Oxford University Press 2019.
  • Congressional Budget Office assessment, 2005, A Potential Influenza Pandemic: Possible Macroeconomic Effects and Policy Issues.
  • Dietrich, A, Kuester, K., Müller, G. and Schoenle, R., 2020. News and uncertainty about COVID -19: Survey Evidence and short-run economic impact, mimeo.
  • Donsimoni, J. R., Glawion, R., Plachter,B., Weiser, C., and Waelde K., 2020. Should contact bans be lifted in Germany? A quantitative prediction of its effects.
  • Eichenbaum, M.S., Rebelo, S. and Trabandt, M., 2020. The macroeconomics of epidemics (No. w26882). National Bureau of Economic Research.
  • Faria-e-Castro, M., 2020. Fiscal Policy during a Pandemic (No. 2020-006).
  • Gros, C., Valenti, R., Valenti, K. and Gros, D., 2020. Strategies for controlling the medical and socio-economic costs of the Corona pandemic. arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.00493.
  • Jonung, L. and Roeger, W., 2006. The macroeconomic effects of a pandemic in Europe-A model-based assessment. Available at SSRN 920851.
  • Keogh‐Brown, M.R., Wren‐Lewis, S., Edmunds, W.J., Beutels, P. and Smith, R.D., 2010. The possible macroeconomic impact on the UK of an influenza pandemic. Health economics, 19(11), pp.1345-1360.
  • McKibbin, W.J. and Fernando, R., 2020. The global macroeconomic impacts of COVID-19: Seven scenarios.
  • McKibbin, W.J. and Sidorenko, A., 2006. Global macroeconomic consequences of pandemic influenza (p. 79). Sydney, Australia: Lowy Institute for International Policy.
  • Sebastian, S. and Volker, W., 2012. The New Keynesian Approach to Dynamic General Equilibrium Modeling: Models, Methods and Macroeconomic Policy Evaluation. Goethe University of Frankfurt: Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability. p1-114.
  • Wieland, V., Afanasyeva, E., Kuete, M. and Yoo, J., 2016. New methods for macro-financial model comparison and policy analysis. In Handbook of Macroeconomics (Vol. 2, pp. 1241-1319). Elsevier.
  • Wieland, V. and Wolters, M., 2013. Forecasting and policy making. In Handbook of economic forecasting (Vol. 2, pp. 239-325). Elsevier.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice

Field Course (4 CP, Macroeconomics)

General Information and Schedule:

This lecture is a 2nd year Ph.D./MSQE field course (4 CP, Macroeconomics) taking place during the 2nd half of the winter term 2019/20.

Time and location:

The lectures are scheduled to take place mainly on Mondays at 9.30 a.m. -12:45 p.m. For a detailed schedule we kindly refer to the university course overview (http://qis.server.uni-frankfurt.de/).

First lecture: Monday, December 9, 2019
Last lecture: Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Teaching Assistant: Lazar Milivojevic (HoF 4.57)

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd Year PhD and MSQE Course (4CP, Macroeconomics).

First Lecture: December 10, 2018
Last Lecture: February 11, 2019

Exam: February 21, 2019 14-16 Room Boston, 2.45

The lectures are scheduled to take place on Mondays from 9:30-12:00 in room "Deutsche Bank" (E.01, House of Finance). The detailed schedule and non-regular classes are available in the university course overview or can be downloaded here.

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the analysis of monetary and fiscal policy making with practical applications to current policy challenges. Examples from the European Union, the United States and Japan will be discussed. We will develop theoretical models of monetary and fiscal policy and learn how different policy recommendations can be evaluated using these models. Students will conduct practical simulation exercises and make use of MATLAB-based software tools for model analysis. 

For further details please have a look into the syllabus

Teaching assistant: Felix Strobel (HoF 4.50)

Registration: Please send an e-mail to Felix Strobel (strobel@econ.uni-frankfurt.de) to confirm that you wish to obtain course information and whether you will take this course for credit. Please include your matriculation number, student status (Ph.D. or MSQE), year of study and full name. Please note that in order to obtain credit points for the course it is also required to register for the course at the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Macro-Financial Modeling: Economic Frictions, Monetary and Fiscal Policy

Ph.D. Program Seminar

Introductory Meeting will take place on Monday, 9th of April 2018 2-3 pm in room Milan 4.59

Please find the syllabus here.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd Year PhD and MSQE Course (4CP, Macroeconomics).

First Lecture: December 12, 2017
Last Lecture: February 07, 2018

Exam: Thursday, 22nd February 2018, 10-11am, Room 3.36 Chicago, House of Finance

The lectures are scheduled to take place mainly on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 10-12 a.m. and 2-4 p.m. in several class rooms in the House of Finance. The detailed schedule and non-regular classes are available in the university course overview or can be downloaded here.

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the analysis of monetary and fiscal policy making with practical applications to current policy challenges. Examples from the European Union, the United States and Japan will be discussed. We will develop theoretical models of monetary and fiscal policy and learn how different policy recommendations can be evaluated using these models. Students will conduct practical simulation exercises and make use of MATLAB-based software tools for model analysis. 

For further details please have a look into the syllabus

Teaching assistants: Balint Tatar and Lazar Milivojevic

To register for the course we kindly ask you to send an email to Balint Tatar. Please note that in order to obtain credit points for the course it is also required to register for the course at the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd Year PhD and MSQE Course (4CP, Macroeconomics)

First Lecture: April 18, 2017
Last Lecture: May 31, 2017

Tuesdays: 10:00-12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)
Wednesdays: 10:00-12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the analysis of monetary and fiscal macro-prudential policy making with practical applications to current policy challenges. Examples from European Union, the United States and Japan will be discussed. We will develop theoretical models of monetary and fiscal policy and learn how different policy recommendations can be evaluated using these models. Students will conduct practical simulation exercises and make use of MATLAB-based software tools for model analysis.

Please see the syllabus and the updated schedule.

Teaching assistant: Philipp Lieberknecht

To register please send an email to Philipp Lieberknecht. Note that in order to get credit points for that course you also need to register with the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Macro-Financial Modeling: Interactions of Monetary, Regulatory and Macroprudential Policies (Prof. Volker Wieland)

2nd Year Ph.D. Seminar
Introductory Meeting: will take place on Tuesday, October, 18th 2-3 pm (room Chicago, 3.36 HoF)

Please find the Syllabus here.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd Year PhD and MSQE Course (4CP, Macroeconomics)

First Lecture: April 12, 2016
Last Lecture: May 24, 2016
Tuesdays: 10:00 - 12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)
Wednesdays: 10:00 - 12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)

Please see the syllabus and the updated schedule.

Teaching assistants: Tilman Bletzinger and Meguy Kuete.

To register please send an email to Tilman Bletzinger. Note that in order to get credit points for that course you also need to register with the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Macro-Financial Modeling: Interactions of Monetary, Regulatory and Macroprudential Policies (Prof. Volker Wieland)

2nd Year Ph.D. Seminar
Introductory Meeting: will take place on Monday, October, 19th 2-3 pm (room Boston, 2.45 HoF)

Please find the Syllabus here.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd Year PhD and MSQE Course (4CP, Macroeconomics)

First Lecture: April 14, 2015
Last Lecture: May 27, 2015
Tuesdays: 10:00 - 12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)
Wednesdays: 10:00 - 12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)

Please see the syllabus and the updated schedule.

To register please send an email to Robert Beyer (robert.beyer@hof.uni-frankfurt.de). Note that in order to get credit points for that course you also need to register with the Office of Academic Records at GSEFM.

Comparative Modelling of Financial Markets and the Macro-Economy (Prof. Volker Wieland)

2nd Year Ph.D. Seminar Course
Introductory Meeting: on Tuesday, 21 October 2014, 2-3 pm, room Shanghai 1.28 in HoF.

Please find the syllabus here.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Wieland)

2nd Year PhD and MSQE Course (4CP, Macroeconomics)

First Lecture: April 16, 2014
Last Lecture: May 28, 2014
Tuesdays: 10:00 - 12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)
Wednesdays: 10:00 - 12:00 in HoF 3.45 (Sydney)

Please see the syllabus and the updated schedule.

To register please send an email to Tilman Bletzinger.

Update:
On May 20th and 27th (both Tuesdays) class is from 8:30 (sharp) until 12:00 and takes place in Boston (HoF 2.45).

Update II:
The written exam takes place in Boston (HoF 2.45) on June 10th from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. Please be a few minutes earlier as we will start on time (10 a.m. sharp).

New Comparative Approach to Macroeconomic Modeling (Prof. Volker Wieland)

2nd Year Ph.D. Seminar Course
Introductory meeting on Monday 21.10.2013, 3-4 pm, room Toronto (HoF, 3rd floor 3.68).

Please see the syllabus here.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Volker Wieland)

Master of Money and Finance elective course "M".
Course will take place Tuesdays 10-12 (HZ 7) and Wednesdays 12-14 (HoF Chicago 3.36).

Please see the syllabus and download the exact schedule.

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice (Prof. Volker Wieland)

2nd Year Ph.D. Course.
Course will take place Tuesday and Wednesday 10-12 am, please check for exact dates on lsf. First Lecture will be on 23 Oct 2012 room Deutsche Bank E.01 (HoF, E 01, ground floor).

Please see the syllabus to download the schedule.

Macroeconomic Model Comparison and Policy Analysis (Prof. Volker Wieland)

2nd Year Ph.D. Seminar Course.
Introductory meeting on Friday 13.04.2012, 12 pm, room Toronto (HoF, 3rd Floor 3.68) to register please send an email to s.schmidt@wiwi.uni-frankfurt.de.
 

International Trade and Development (Prof. Werner)

B. Sc. (5 CP, 3 SWS).
Tuesdays: 16:00-20:00, Room HZ 1.
 

Issues in Monetary Theory and Practice (Prof. Werner)

Master of Science in Money and Finance (6 CP, 2 SWS). Blockseminar.
Please register with Ms. Nagel for the seminar: dnagel@wiwi.uni-frankfurt.de
 

Makroökonomie 2 PMAK (Prof. Werner)

B. Sc. (6 CP, 3 SWS).
Tuesdays: 12:00-14:00, Room HZ 4 (biweekly).
Wednesdays: 10:00-12:00, Room HZ 13 (weekly).
Tutorials (Mentorien): Tuesdays 18:00-20:00, Room HZ 10 (biweekly)
 

Topics in Business Cycle Analysis (Dr. Maik Wolters)

Master of Science in Money and Finance (6 CP, 3 SWS).
Tuesdays: 12:00-14:00, Room HZ 10 (weekly).
Tuesdays: 16:00-18:00,  Room HZ 10 (biweekly).
First lecture: April 10, 2012.

Wintersemester 2011/2012

  • Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Theory and Practice
    (Prof. Wieland)
    2nd year Ph. D. course
    Tuesdays: 10-12 a.m. Room Sydney (HoF 3.45)
    Thursdays: 10-12 a.m. Room Chicago (HoF 3.36)
    First lecture: October 20 (10-12 a.m., Room Chicago)
    Note: Introduction to Model Base on November 17

Sommersemester 2011

  • Learning in Macroeconomics
    (Prof. Wieland)
    2nd year Ph. D. course. 1st Meeting (Tue 12.04.11, 10:15 am HoF 2.45)
  • Topics in Macroeconomic Model Building
    (Prof. Wieland)
    2nd year Ph.D. seminar course. Introductory meeting on Thu. 21.04.11, 12 pm, room Toronto (HoF, 3rd floor).  To register for the introductory meeting, please send an email to: s.schmidt@wiwi.uni-frankfurt.de
  • International Trade and Development
    (Prof. Werner)
  • Topics in Monetary Economics
    (Prof. Werner)

Wintersemester 2010/2011

  • Makroökonomie 1 (BMAK)
    (Prof. Wieland)
    Vorlesung mit Übung (6 SWS), Bachelor of Science
  • A New Comparative Approach to Model-Based Analysis of Macroeconomic Policy Making
    (Prof. Wieland)
    2nd year Ph.D. seminar course

Sommersemester 2010

  • Makroökonomie 1 (BMAK)
    (Prof. Wieland)
    Vorlesung mit Übung (6 SWS), Bachelor of Science
  • Topics in Macroeconomic Modelling
    (Prof. Wieland)
    2nd year Ph.D. seminar course

Wintersemester 2009/2010

  • Makroökonomie 1 (BMAK)
    (Prof. Wieland)
    Vorlesung mit Übung (6 SWS), Bachelor of Science
  • A New Comparative Approach to Macroeconomic Modelling and Policy Analysis
    (Prof. Wieland)
    2nd year Ph.D. seminar course

Sommersemester 2009

Professor Wieland bietet dieses Semester keine Veranstaltungen an. Eine Vertretung erfolgt durch Herrn Prof. Richard A. Werner, D.Phil. (Oxon). Folgende Veranstaltungen werden durch die Professur angeboten:

  • Topics in Macroeconomics (WME:TOMA)
    (Prof. Werner)
    Lectures in English. This course is offered for third year Bachelor students; please visit WebCT for registration and further information. 16.04.2009 - 17.07.2009. Time and place: Thu. 16:00 - 19:00, HZ 8.
  • Topics in Monetary Economics
    (Prof. Werner)
    Lectures in English. This course is offered for third year Bachelor students; please visit WebCT for registration and further information. 15.04.2009 - 17.07.2009. Time and place:  Wed. 16:00 - 19:00, HoF - E.20 / DZ Bank. Exception: 27.05.2009 lecture takes place in HZ 14.

Wintersemester 2008/2009

Professor Wieland bietet dieses Semester keine Veranstaltungen an. Eine Vertretung erfolgt durch Herrn Sergey Slobodyan, Ph.D. Folgende Veranstaltungen werden durch die Professur angeboten:

  • Advanced Macroeconomic Theory 1 Part 1 (AMA1:DGW8)
    First part of AMA1, 14.10.2008-27.11.2008; Time and place:  Tuesday, Thursday 10:15-11:45, HoF 5 (no lecture on Tuesday 18.11.2008, make up class on the same day 16:00-17:30 in HoF 4 (DZ Bank))
  • Theoretical Foundations of Modern Monetary Policy
    Lecture in English for third year B.Sc. or fourth year Diplom Students, also second year MSQE students professional track; Time and place: Monday 14:00-16:00, H 15; every odd week Wednesday 16:00 - 18:00, H 16
  • Indeterminacy and Learning in DSGE Models
    Lecture in English for second year Ph.D. and MSQE students; See the course webpage for further information: Time and place:  Tuesday 14:15-15:45, HoF 1; Thursday 8:30-10:00, HoF 1

Sommersemester 2008

  • Topics in Monetary Economics
    (Binder/Wieland)
    Ph.D. Program Field Course. Date: July 17 and 18.
    Location: Goethe-Universität, House of Finance.
  • Economic Growth
    (Koulovatianos)
    Blockseminar for Students in Diplom/Spezialisierungsstudium: 30.06-04.07.08; Place: Burg Rothenfels; Vorbesprechung: 20.2.2008, 18:00 - 19:00 Uhr, Raum 120B
  • Numerical Methods and Dynamic Economics
    (Koulovatianos)
    Lecture in English for second year Ph.D. students; Time and place:
    Tuesday 12:00 - 14:00, H A
  • Selected Topics in Money and Macroeconomics - Economic Growth
    (Koulovatianos)
    In English for Students in Diplom/Spezialisierungsstudium and Bachelor (BSc 5); every second week Mo, 12:00 - 14:00 starting on April 7th, AfE 502, every week Wed: 12:00 - 14:00, H 7 starting on April 2nd!

Wintersemester 2007/2008

Professor Wieland bietet wegen eines Forschungssemesters keine Veranstaltungen an.  Eine Vertretung erfolgt durch Herrn Christos Koulovatianos, Ph.D.

  • Makroökonomie 1 (BMAK)
    V/UE ; Di 10:00 - 14:00 Uhr H IV ; Do 08:00 - 10:00 Uhr  ebenfalls H IV
    Mentorium zu Makroökonomie findet statt ab dem 07.11.07 Mittwochs 14:00 - 16:00 und 16:00 - 18:00 Uhr in H1, H5, H9 und H13.
  • Advanced Macroeconomic Theory I – Part I  (AMA1: DGW8)
    Monday 10:00-12:00 and Wednesday 08:00-10:00. Room 120B

Ferner wird für Doktoranden angeboten:

  • Field Course (Ph.D.) : DSGE Models - Theory and Applications
    This course is offered by Gernot Müller and Roland Straub. Start: Monday, October 15.  12 - 14 pm.  Georg Voigt Str. 14, Room 205

Sommersemester 2007

  • Advanced Macroeconomics 2 (Ph.D./MSQE)
    Lectures take place Mondays 12:00pm-2:00pm and Tuesdays 10:00am-12:00pm in Room 120B; please note that this course takes place in the first half of the summer term, i.e. from April 16 to May 29, 2007.
  • Field Course (Ph.D.)

Wintersemester 2006/2007

  • Bachelorstudium: Makroökonomie 1

Sommersemester 2006

  • Macroeconomics III
  • Ph.D. Program: Advanced Macroeconomics 1: Part 2
  • Seminar: Fiscal and Monetary Stabilization Policies: Theory, Evidence and Applications (Macroeconomic Models and Policy Analysis)

Wintersemester 2005/2006

  • Ph.D. Program: Advanced Macroeconomics 1: Part 1

Sommersemester 2005

  • Spezialisierungsstudium: Makroökonomie 3
  • Seminar: The Science of Monetary Policy
  • Course on Estimation, Solution and Policy Analyses using Equilibrium Monetary Models, by Lawrence Christiano (Northwestern University)

Wintersemester 2004/2005

  • Ph.D. Program: Advances Macroeconomics 1: Part 2

Sommersemester 2004

  • Graduiertenkolleg: Advanced Macroeconomics 1: Part 2
  • Spezialisierungsstudium: Makroökonomie 3

Sommersemester 2003

  • Spezialisierungsstudium: International Finance
  • Grundstudium: Makroökonomie 1

Sommersemester 2002

  • Spezialisierungsstudium: International Finance
  • Seminar: The Science of Monetary Policy

Wintersemester 2001/2002

  • Graduiertenkolleg: Advanced Macroeconomics
  • Grundstudium: Makroökonomie 1

Sommersemester 2001

  • Spezialisierungsstudium: International Finance

Wintersemester 2000/2001

  • Graduiertenkolleg: Advanced Macroeconomic