News

2017 NZAE Conference dates and keynotes

October 21 2016

The NZAE are pleased to announce the following keynote speakesr at their 2017 Conference, held 12-14th July 2017 at Victoria University’s Rutherford House.

  • Lisa Cameron, Professor of Econometrics & Business Statistics, Monash, more.
  • William Strange, Professor of Business Economics, Rotman, more.
  • Andrew Atkeson, Professor of Economics and Finance, UCLA, more.
  • John Gibson, Professor of Economics, Waikato, more

Details including Programme and Paper Submission can be found at the dedicated NZAE Conference site.

2017 Conference important dates:

  • Wednesday 22nd February First notice of conference sent out
  • Wednesday 22nd February Portal for abstract submissions opens
  • Friday 24th March Final notice of conference sent out
  • Monday 27th March Conference registration opens
  • Monday 3rd April Abstracts Due
  • By Monday 24th April Notification of acceptances
  • Monday 15th May Registration deadline for presenters
  • Monday 15th May Deadline for early-bird registration
  • Monday 12th June Full papers due for entries to prizes
  • Wednesday 12th July Conference start
  • Friday 14th July Conference end

NZAE Membership

Members of the NZAE typically have a degree in economics or commerce and in the normal course of work use the tools of economic analysis as teachers, investigators or advisors on economic matters.

Benefits
  • The NZAE Conference
  • Subscription to Asymmetric Information Newsletter
  • Free access to NZAE Journal

The NZAE Conference

Held annually, with presentations provided by local and international economists.

The next conference will be in 2026

New ZealandEconomic Papers

New Zealand Economic Papers publishes research of the highest quality from leading international scholars in all areas of economics. The Journal also serves as an outlet for world class research on important economic and policy issues relevant to New Zealand, the Pacific, Australia, and Asia. The Journal covers all aspects of economics, from micro- to macrotheory and micro- to macroeconometrics.

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