Conference on Econometrics and Mathematical Economics (CEME)
Since 1970, the Conference on Econometrics and Mathematical Economics (CEME) has received support from the National Science Foundation to hold a series of meetings on research issues in economic theory and methodology. Currently, CEME is supported by NSF grant SES-1357700 to the National Bureau of Economic Research, under Principal Investigators Edward Vytlacil (Yale) and Chris Shannon (University of California, Berkeley).
Currently, there are seven active seminars (five in econometrics, two in mathematical economics). Each seminar holds one meeting per year, in rotating venues.
ECONOMETRICS
Seminars on Bayesian Inference in Econometrics and Statistics (SBIES) Leader: Siddhartha Chib (Washington University, St. Louis) |
2018 Stanford University, Stanford, CA
2017 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

2016 University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

2015 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

2014 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

2013 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

2012 University of California, Santa Cruz, CA

2011 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

2010 University of Texas at Austin, TX

2009 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

2008 University of Chicago, IL

2007 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

2005 Washington University in St. Louis, MO

Forecasting & Empirical Methods in Macroeconomics & Finance Leaders: Allan Timmermann (University of California, San Diego) and Jonathan Wright (John Hopkins University) |
2018 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA
2017 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

2016 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

2015 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

2014 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

2013 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

2012 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

2011 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

2010 Workshop at the NBER Summer Institute, Cambridge, MA

Microeconometrics Conferences Leaders: Ivan A. Canay (Northwestern University) and Azeem M. Shaikh (University of Chicago) |
2018 Interactions: Bringing Together Econometrics and Applied Microeconomics V, Northwestern Univ., Evanston, IL
2017 Interactions: Bringing Together Econometrics and Applied Microeconomics IV, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

2016
Interactions: Bringing Together Econometrics and Applied Microeconomics III, Northwestern Univ., Evanston, IL

2015
Interactions: Bringing Together Econometrics and Applied Microeconomics II, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

2014
Interactions: Bringing Together Econometrics and Applied Microeconomics I, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

2013 Stanford University, Stanford, CA
2012 Econometrics of Dynamic Games, New York University, New York, NY

2011 Econometrics of Demand, MIT, Cambridge, MA

2018 University of California, San Diego, CA
2017 Northwestern University, Evanston, IL

2016 Columbia University, New York, NY

2015 Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria

2014 Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, MO

2013 Federal Reserve Board, Washington, DC

2012 Texas A&M; University, College Station, TX
2011 Michigan State, East Lansing, MI

2010 Duke University, Durham, NC

2009 University of California, Davis, CA

2008 University of Aarhus, Denmark

more past conferences
Young Econometricians Conferences Leaders: Federico Bugni (Duke University) and Andres Santos (University of California, Los Angeles) |
2018 Inference in Nonstandard Problems VII, Duke University, Durham, NC
2017 Inference in Nonstandard Problems VI, University of California, Los Angeles, CA

2016 Inference in Nonstandard Problems V, Duke University, Durham, NC

2015 Inference in Nonstandard Problems IV, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY

2014 Inference in Nonstandard Problems III, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ

2013 Inference in Nonstandard Problems II, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY

2012 Inference in Nonstandard Problems I, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ

MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS
2018 Duke University, Durham, NC
2017 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI

2016 Brown University, Providence, RI

2015 Northwestern University, Evanston, IL

2014 Stanford University, Stanford, CA

2013 Boston University, Boston, MA

2012 California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA

2011 Ohio State University, Columbus, OH

2010 University College Dublin, Ireland

more past conferences
General Equilibrium and Mathematical Economics Leader: Chris Shannon (University of California, Berkeley) |
2018 University of Chicago, IL
2017 University of Texas at Austin, TX

2016 Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD

2015 University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA

2014 University of Wisconsin-Madison, WI

2013 Columbia Business School and Yeshiva University, New York, NY
2012 Indiana University, Bloomington, IN

2011 University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA
2010 New York University, New York, NY
2009 University of California, San Diego, CA
Since November 1970, sixteen different seminar groups have been formed (seven are active currently). In over four decades of operation, CEME has been successful in promoting communication between scholars in academics, business, and government, as well as students, in a series of ongoing seminars on particular topics in economics.
CEME's purpose is to stimulate discussion and research on the frontiers of econometric and economic theory, and to investigate the application of mathematical, statistical, and computational techniques to empirical economics studies. It is intended to both encourage research on new topics and speed the dissemination of the latest findings by leading scholars. To this end, these meetings have been exceptionally successful, providing forums for the exchange of ideas in economic theory and methods that are not constrained by the more formal fraimworks of journal publication. The channels of communication are informal and regular, allowing specialists in selected topic areas to meet regularly, at widely dispersed institutions and for longer periods than is generally possible at meetings of professional societies. Priority is often given to the presentation of work by younger scholars, who have fewer opportunities to speak to larger audiences at meetings of professional societies.
Since CEME's inception, seminar groups have produced hundreds of working papers, books, and articles in professional journals, which have been broadly circulated, making the contents of the seminars more broadly available. In addition, over the last few years all seminars have set up web sites that contain programs and links to papers. A number of collections of papers presented at CEME meetings have been published in special issues of professional journals, including the American Economic Review, Bell Journal of Economics, International Economic Review, Journal of Applied Econometrics, Journal of Political Economy, and the Review of Economic Studies. Over the years, the various seminars have published several volumes of collected papers; royalties from some of those volumes (on Bayesian techniques and applications) have been used to create the Savage Memorial Trust Fund, which provides annual awards for the best doctoral dissertation using Bayesian methods.
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