Complessivamente abbiamo ricevuto 96 candidature e, alla luce dell'elevata qualità dei paper ricevuti, la Commissione ha deciso all'unanimità di ampliare la serie dei premi di quest'anno da CINQUE a DIECI.
Pertanto i 10 vincitori sono (in ordine alfabetico):
Eduard Boehm - Intermediation, Choice Frictions, and Selection: Evidence from the Chilean Pension Market
Arnoud Dyevre - Public R&D and Productivity Growth
Lukas Freund - Superstar Teams: The Micro Origins and Macro Implications of Coworker Complementarities
Guangbin Hong - Two-Sided Sorting of Workers and Firms: Implications for Spatial Inequality and Welfare
Vatsal Khandelwal - Silent Networks: The Role of Inaccurate Beliefs in Reducing Useful Social Interactions
Lukas Mann - Spatial Sorting and the Rise of Geographic Inequality
Hugo Reichardt - Scale-Biased Technical Change and Inequality
Taisiya Sikorskaya - Institutional Investors, Securities Lending, and Short-Selling Constraints
Jinglun Yao - Knowledge is (Market) Power
Chuan Yu - The Welfare Effects of Sponsored Product Advertising
Per maggiori informazioni riguardo il bando, clicca qui.