The global economic order is undergoing a fundamental transformation. The globalization paradigm has given way to new perspectives on the benefits and risks of economic interdependence as well as the geopolitical and security implications of market integration. The world is moving away from a rules-based system where economic integration was seen as an end in itself to one where geopolitical considerations increasingly dictate policy decisions and the extent of economic openness.
The Geoeconomics RPN will focus on these new challenges in a comprehensive way. The main goal of this network is to generate, coordinate and disseminate policy-relevant academic research on these questions, to develop a more precise understanding of geo-economic strategies and to foster the dialogue between academics and policy makers, working at the intersection of geopolitics and economics.
The RPN will address the concept of economic security in a world where strategic players exploit economic and financial vulnerabilities (“choke points”). Researchers will study how international economic policies can be used to achieve geopolitical, security and foreign policy goals and aim to quantify these vulnerabilities and the economic costs of potential disruptions of supply chains, production networks, financial networks, technology and market access. Other topics include the potential consequences of deglobalization for macroeconomic outcomes, as well as the effects of growing geopolitical risks and wars on growth and development, as well as on inflation, interest rates, and asset returns and the geography of capital flows.
The Geoeconomics RPN will bring together leading researchers and policymakers interested in these questions. Its main aim is to learn, discuss with each other, and produce new knowledge that can be shared with policymakers and the general public – via research papers, webinars, policy reports and columns on voxeu.org.
The Kiel Institute will host the new Geoeconomics RPN in a new office in Berlin, with regular events, policy interaction, and an international visitors program for top scholars doing research on the topic. This new push will complement and strengthen the Kiel-based Geopolitics and Economics Initiative founded last year. Sciences Po is a strategic partner in these initiatives, but we are keen to develop institutional ties beyond the Franco-German sphere.
Events and Output
The Geoeconomics RPN hosted an inaugural conference in Berlin in November 2023. This conference, jointly organized by the Kiel Institute and CEPR in cooperation with the Federal Foreign Office and Sciences Po, brought together world-leading scholars working at the intersection of geopolitics and (international) economics. A second conference is planned for October 2024.
Geoeconomics and International Lending & Sovereign Debt RPNs Session at the CEPR Paris Symposium 2023
On Tuesday, 12 December, 14:30 - 15:30 (Paris time), the Geoeconomics and International Lending & Sovereign Debt RPNs held a joint Session during the CEPR Paris Symposium 2023.
Steering Committee
Members
Sandeep Baliga
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsAntoine Bouet
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsFernando Broner
Fellow, International Macroeconomics and FinanceNicole Deitelhoff
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsGabriel Felbermayr
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsJulian Hinz
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsMatteo Iacoviello
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsAlexey Makarin
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsJosefin Meyer
RPN Member, International Lending and Sovereign DebtNicholas Mulder
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsAbraham Newman
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsEvgenia Passari
Affiliate, International Macroeconomics and FinanceNancy Qian
Fellow, Development EconomicsLucrezia Reichlin
Fellow, Monetary Economics and FluctuationsFeodora Teti
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsIsabel Vansteenkiste
RPN Member, European Economic PolicyBeatrice Weder di Mauro
CEPR PresidentCornelia Woll
RPN Member, GeoeconomicsUpcoming events
CEPR Paris Symposium 2024
- Competition Policy
- European Economic Policy
- European Financial Architecture
- Fintech and Digital Currencies
- Geoeconomics
- Household Finance
- Inequality and the Role of Firms
- International Lending and Sovereign Debt
- Media Plurality
- Asset Pricing
- Banking and Corporate Finance
- Climate Change and the Environment
- Development Economics
- Economic History
- International Macroeconomics and Finance
- International Trade and Regional Economics
- Labour Economics
- Industrial Organization
- Macroeconomics and Growth
- Monetary Economics and Fluctuations
- Organizational Economics
- Political Economy
- Public Economics
Past events
Economic frontlines: Ukraine and Russia’s war economies
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- Ukraine Initiative
CEPR Paris Symposium 2024
- Competition Policy
- European Economic Policy
- European Financial Architecture
- Fintech and Digital Currencies
- Geoeconomics
- Household Finance
- Inequality and the Role of Firms
- International Lending and Sovereign Debt
- Media Plurality
- Asset Pricing
- Banking and Corporate Finance
- Climate Change and the Environment
- Development Economics
- Economic History
- International Macroeconomics and Finance
- International Trade and Regional Economics
- Labour Economics
- Industrial Organization
- Macroeconomics and Growth
- Monetary Economics and Fluctuations
- Organizational Economics
- Political Economy
- Public Economics
CEPR Paris Symposium 2023
- Central Bank Communication
- Climate Change
- Competition Policy
- European Economic Policy
- European Financial Architecture
- Fintech and Digital Currencies
- Geoeconomics
- Household Finance
- Inequality and the Role of Firms
- International Lending and Sovereign Debt
- Media Plurality
- Preventing Conflict: Policies for Peace
- Spatial Disparities and Policy
- Sustainable Finance
- Asset Pricing
- Banking and Corporate Finance
- International Macroeconomics and Finance
- International Trade and Regional Economics
- Monetary Economics and Fluctuations
- Macroeconomics and Growth
- Labour Economics
- Political Economy
- Public Economics
- Economic History
- Industrial Organization
- Organizational Economics
- Development Economics