Di Giovanni, Julian
Research Professor
Social & Behavioural Sciences
Institucio Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avancats
Spain
Biography
Julian di Giovanni is an ICREA Research Professor at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, the Deputy Director for Research and a Research Professor at the Barcelona GSE, a Research Associate at the CREI, and a Research Fellow of the CEPR. He worked for the Research Department of the IMF from 2004-2013. He has been a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto, and a Visiting Scholar at the Banque de France, Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, and the IMF. He was awarded an International Incoming Fellowship from the European Research Council Marie Curie Actions (2014), and a European Research Council Consolidator Grant (2016). He has published in the American Economic Review, Econometrica, Journal of Political Economy, Journal of the European Economic Association, and other leading economic journals. He received his PhD in Economics at the University of California, Berkeley in 2004.
Research Interest
He works in international economics and macroeconomics broadly defined, with a recent focus on empirical work using big data. The underlying aim in the majority of his work is to provide a better understanding of how different forms of cross-country integration impact domestic economic outcomes. One strand of his current research studies how shocks at the firm transmit across countries via production linkages, and the implications for macroeconomic interdependence. This work builds on past research that studies the importance of micro shocks and large firms in driving macroecomic fluctuations. He also worked on the transmission of monetary shocks across borders, and he is currently involved in a project studying the impact of the global financial cycle on local credit markets in emerging markets.
Publications
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“A Global View of Cross-Border Migration,†with Andrei A. Levchenko and Francesc Ortega. Journal of the European Economic Association, 13:1 (February 2015), 168–202.
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“Income-Induced Expenditure Switching,†with Rudolfs Bems. American Economic Review, 106:12 (December 2016), 3898–3931.
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“Capital Flows and the International Credit Channel,†with Yu¸suf S. Baskaya, S¸ebnem KalemliOzcan, Jos´e-Luis Peydro, and Mehmet F. Ulu. ¨ Forthcoming, Journal of International Economics.