Mgr. Lucie Přikrylová
PhD studies coordinator, office no. 209
phone: | +420 549 49 6693 |
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e‑mail: | phd@econ.muni.cz |
The programme's goal is to develop students into top specialists in the fields of economic modelling and methodology of economics. The study programme is aimed at obtaining thorough theoretical knowledge in the areas of modern microeconomics, macroeconomics, econometrics, and the methodology of the economics, in accordance with the dissertation focus.
The topic proposes to study several possible research questions in the field of forecasting performance of DSGE and/or empirical models, incl. a possible focus on (Bayesian) prediction averaging. The topic aligns well with the ongoing research projects conducted by a small team of macroeconomists within the department. The student working on this topic will have access to supercomputing facilities, enabling to perform calculations with high computational requirements.
The supervisor for this topic is associate professor Jan Čapek. Detailed information about the supervisor, his publications and research projects can be found here.
An important strand of economic literature investigates conflicts and contests among individuals or groups (political conflicts, competition between firms, team performance etc.). The topic proposes to study several possible research directions in this field. Topics such as endogenous formation of coalitions in group contests, conflict mediation or effect of fake news belong among potential research questions. The research method involves laboratory experiments. The student will have access to the infrastructure of Masaryk University Experimental Economics Laboratory. Part of the research can be funded through ongoing GACR project.
The supervisor for this topic is associate professor Rostislav Staněk. Detailed information about the supervisor, his publications and research projects can be found here.
A crucial problem in health economics and health policy is patients’ low investment in preventive health care. Present-bias preferences and limited information have frequently been put forth as a theoretical explanation for this. The topic proposes to conduct a field experiment testing different advertising strategies to increase demand for preventive health care. The advertising strategies include monetary payments, information provision or different framing of the advertising statement. The research method is field experiment. The research is a part of a submitted Exceles research project and can be funded from the research scheme.
The supervisor for this topic is associate professor Rostislav Staněk. Detailed information about the supervisor, his publications and research projects can be found here.
The transport patterns and modal splits are strongly influenced by a decision of households of how many cars to own. The number of available cars in the household determines the public transport usage and effectiveness of transport investment policies. The thesis aims to explore the reasons that determine the decision to own 0, 1, 2, 3, or more cars. The method of the thesis will be a consumer survey among households. The survey will investigate the socio-economic characteristics of households and attitudes of their members toward cars and public transport. Based on this survey the multinominal logit model will be estimated and the determinants of choice identified.
The supervisor for this topic is professor Zdeněk Tomeš. Detailed information about the supervisor, his publications and research projects can be found here.
This dissertation comprises three empirical essays in health economics, with a particular focus on the consequences of healthcare accessibility and exposure to social and environmental determinants of health (the exposome). The analyses employ modern econometric methods, including causal inference techniques and microsimulation models.
The supervisor for this topic is associate professor Štěpán Mikula. Detailed information about the supervisor, his publications and research projects can be found here.
This dissertation explores the dynamics of local currency sovereign debt in low- and lower-middle-income countries through three empirical studies. It investigates the fundamental determinants influencing official debt accumulation and its long-term sustainability, the mechanisms underlying the pricing of sovereign risk premiums in underdeveloped financial markets, and the interaction between exchange rate arrangements and the incidence of sovereign defaults on local currency obligations. Utilizing advanced econometric modeling and decomposition methodologies, the research seeks to enhance understanding of sovereign debt sustainability, the formation of risk premiums in shallow markets, and the factors driving defaults on local currency debt in vulnerable economies.
The supervisor for this topic is associate professor Jan Čapek. Detailed information about the supervisor, his publications and research projects can be found here.
PhD studies coordinator, office no. 209
phone: | +420 549 49 6693 |
---|---|
e‑mail: | phd@econ.muni.cz |