Prof. Farzad Saidi, PhD
Position im Cluster Investigator
Clustermitglied seit 2021
Forschungsbereiche
Forschungsschwerpunkte
Bankenwesen und Finanzintermediation, Geldpolitik, Unternehmensfinanzierung
Lebenslauf
Farzad Saidi ist Professor für Finanzmarktökonomik an der Universität Bonn. Er hat einen Master of Science in Ökonometrie und mathematischer Volkswirtschaftslehre von der London School of Economics und promovierte 2013 in Volkswirtschaftslehre an der New York University. Vor seiner Berufung nach Bonn war er Juniorprofessor für Finanzmarktökonomik an der Boston University, der Stockholm School of Economics und der University of Cambridge.
Publikationen
Veröffentlichungen
-
Altruism, Social Interactions, and the Course of a Pandemic
Alfaro, L., Faia, E., Lamersdorf, N., & Saidi, F. (2024). Altruism, social interactions, and the course of a pandemic. European Economic Review. -
Health Externalities and Policy: The Role of Social Preferences
Alfaro, L., Faia, E., Lamersdorf, N., & Saidi, F. (2022). Health Externalities and Policy: The Role of Social Preferences. Management Science. -
Banks and Negative Interest Rates
Heider, F., Saidi, F., & Schepens, G. (2021) Banks and Negative Interest Rates. Annual Review of Financial Economics. -
Regulatory Forbearance in the U.S. Insurance Industry: The Effects of Removing Capital Requirements for an Asset Class
Becker, B., Opp, M. M., & Saidi, F. (2021) Regulatory Forbearance in the U.S. InsuranceIndustry: The Effects of Removing Capital Requirements for an Asset Class. The Review of Financial Studies. -
Bank Concentration and Product Market Competition
Saidi, F., Streitz, D. (2021). Bank Concentration and Product Market Competition, The Review of Financial Studies.
Discussion Papers
-
Assortative Matching, Interbank Markets, and Monetary Policy
-
Short-Time Work Extensions
-
Insurers Monitor Shocks to Collateral: Micro Evidence from Mortgage-backed Securities
-
Two Centuries of Systemic Bank Runs
-
Less Bank Regulation, More Non-Bank Lending
-
Army of Mortgagors: Long-Run Evidence on Credit Externalities and the Housing Market
-
Mixing QE and Interest Rate Policies at the Effective Lower Bound: Micro Evidence from the Euro Area
-
Information Transmission between Banks and the Market for Corporate Control
-
Tracing Banks‘ Credit Allocation to their Funding Costs
-
The Augmented Bank Balance-Sheet Channel of Monetary Policy
-
Altruism, Social Interactions, and the Course of a Pandemic
-
Health Externalities and Policy: The Role of Social Preferences
-
The Bank Liquidity Channel of Financial (In)stability
-
Credit Supply, Firms, and Earnings Inequality