- European Central Bank conference
Challenges in the digital age
Thursday, 4 and Friday, 5 July 2019 Frankfurt am Main
Participation is by invitation only.
Programme
* indicates the presenter
- 8:00
- Registration
- 9:00
- 
   Welcome addressPhilip Lane, Member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank 
- 9:15
- 
   Keynote speech Work of the past, work of the futureDavid Autor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chair: Frank Smets, European Central Bank 
- 10:15
- 
   Coffee break 
- 
   Session 1 Work, wages and technology: Past, present and futureTechnological change can have profound effects on labour markets. This session will consider the effects of technology from a historical perspective, the impact of more recent IT investments and automation, and potential issues for policy should artificial intelligence permanently exclude some people from the labour force. Chair: Rachel Ngai, London School of Economics 
- 10:45
- 
   Automatic reaction – What happens to workers at firms that automate- *Anna Salomons, Universiteit Utrecht
- James Bessen, Boston University
- Maarten Goos, Universiteit Utrecht
- Wiljan van den Berge, CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis
 
- 11:20
- 
   Productivity-enhancing technology and labour market outcomes- *James Bessen, Boston University
- Cesare Righi, Boston University
 
- 11:55
- 
   Economic policy towards digitisation: Can it enhance the goodies and abate the baddies?Manuel Trajtenberg, Tel Aviv University 
- 12:30
- 
   Session discussion
- 13:00
- Buffet lunch
- 14:30
- 
   Keynote speech Productivity growth, market power and monetary policyChad Syverson, Chicago Booth Chair: Luc Laeven, European Central Bank 
- 15:30
- 
   Coffee break 
- 
   Session 2 Market power in the digital ageDigital technologies have the potential to allow scale without mass and to allow innovative start-ups to grow and gain large market shares. This session will consider online pricing and the drivers of markups and concentration in the digital era, and will examine the implications of these forces for macroeconomic policy. Chair: Christos Genakos, Cambridge Judge Business School 
- 16:00
- 
   More Amazon effects: Online competition and pricing behavioursAlberto Cavallo, Harvard University 
- 16:35
- 
   Digitisation and the macroeconomics of superstars- *Anton Korinek, University of Virginia
- Ding Xuan Ng, Johns Hopkins
 
- 17:10
- 
   Out of thin air? Drivers of industry concentration- *Chiara Criscuolo, OECD
- Matej Bajgar, OECD
- Jonathan Timmis, OECD
 
- 17:45
- 
   Session discussion
- 19:00
- 
   Dinner – invitation only 
- 20:00
- 
   Dinner speechAutomation: Recent determinants and long-run consequences Robin Hanson, George Mason University 
- 8:30
- Registration and coffee
- 
   Session 3 Growth and productivity: Can digital technologies deliver?Digital technologies have the potential to generate incredible productivity gains, and yet the past fifteen years have seen a protracted decline in productivity growth. This session will examine the productivity impact of technologies such as big data and online platforms, and will consider when we will see the promised productivity gains. Chair: Gino Gancia, Queen Mary and CREI 
- 9:15
- 
   The impact of big data on firm performance: An empirical investigationPat Bajari, Amazon 
- 9:50
- 
   World productivity: 1996-2014- *John Fernald, INSEAD
- Mehrdad Esfahani, Arizona State University
- Bart Hobijn, Arizona State University
 
- 10:25
- 
   Coffee break 
- 10:45
- 
   Medium-term drivers of productivity growthDiego Comin, Dartmouth College 
- 11:20
- 
   Digital technologies and online platforms: The holy grail of productivity?Peter Gal, OECD 
- 11:55
- 
   Session discussion
- 12:30
- Buffet lunch
- 14:00
- 
   Panel discussionChair: Reinhilde Veugelers, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Panellists: - Pat Bajari, Amazon
 
- Romain Duval, International Monetary Fund 
 
- Janice Eberly, Northwestern University 
 
- Jonathan Haskel, Monetary Policy Committee, Bank of England 
 
 
- Pat Bajari, Amazon
- 15:30
- End of conference
This programme may be subject to change without notice.
General information
English
Participants are requested to arrange their own transfers.
- Vincent Labhard, European Central Bank
- Peter McAdam, European Central Bank
- Julian Morgan, European Central Bank
- Filippos Petroulakis, European Central Bank
Clare Childs
 Directorate General Economics
 Supply Side, Labour and Surveillance Division
+49 172 1442930
digitalisation@ecb.europa.eu