Econometrics, Statistics and Empirical Economics

S510/S520 Topics in Economics and Finance

This seminar is jointly offered by the departments of Prof. Dr. Martin Biewen (Statistics, Econometrics, and Quantitative Methods) and Prof. Dr. Joachim Grammig (Econometrics, Statistics, and Empirical Economics).

Please register by joining the ILIAS folder, where you will have to upload a current transcript of records and fill out a survey regarding your topic preferences by Octobe 12, 23:55. Your supervising chair will be assigned to you based on your indicated preferences, and you will be contacted once the decision has been made.

Lecturer

Prof. Dr. Martin Biewen

Prof. Dr. Joachim Grammig

Dr. Julie Schnaitmann

Miriam Sturm

Alexander Reining

Simon Zeller

Jacqueline Gut

Robin Gligorov

LevelMaster
PrerequisitesAt least one successfully completed master course offered by the departments of Prof. Biewen or Prof. Grammig
LanguageEnglish
Credit Points9
Exam

1. Term paper

2. Paper presentation

3. Discussion of another paper

Timeline

until 12.10.2025, 23:55Upload transcript of records to the Ilias folder and fill out survey 
until 17.10.2025Assignment to supervising chairvia email
until 24.10.2025Discussion of the chosen topic with supervisor 
31.10.2025Start of working time 
09.01.2026, noon (12:00)Deadline for submitting seminar thesis 
16.01.2026Presentation of final thesisroom 209, Mohlstr. 36

Seminar outline

The seminar will be held jointly by the departments of Prof. Biewen and Prof. Grammig. Topics of the seminar will include:

Each participant will be assigned a specific topic. We expect all participants to prepare a professional presentation and a term-paper on his/her topic, which may include a small empirical application using data such as German Socio-Economic Panel Study or a data set from the field of finance.

Formal guidelines

Plagiarism and academic fraud

It is strictly forbidden to: i) copy/paste text from existing publications outside a regular quote, ii) copy essential thoughts or structures from existing work without acknowledging their sources, iii) use substantial external help in carrying out research or writing without acknowledging this, iv) produce fake research results. Any violations of these rules may lead to exmatriculation. Academic fraud may also destroy your career if discovered later in your life. We will use software to detect potential academic misconduct.