Tim Eisert
Tim Eisert
Professor Associado com Agregação
Finanças

Tim Eisert é Professor Associado de Finanças e Investigador Afiliado do CEPR. Estuda a intermediação financeira, a política monetária e as finanças empresariais. O seu trabalho foi publicado nas principais revistas académicas, incluindo o Journal of Finance, a Review of Financial Studies e a Management Science. Tim obteve o seu doutoramento na Universidade Goethe em 2014, tendo sido professor assistente e associado na Universidade Erasmus de Roterdão.

2014 - Doutoramento em Finanças, Goethe University Frankfurt

2009 - Licenciatura em Economia e Economia Empresarial, Goethe University Frankfurt

Intermediação financeira, política monetária, finanças empresariais

  • Eisert, Tim, Acharya, Viral V., Crosignani, Matteo, Eufinger, Christian (2023). Zombie credit and (dis-)inflation: Evidence from Europe. (Accepted/In press) Journal of Finance.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Bergant, Katharina, Crosignani, Matteo, Eisert, Tim, Mccann, Fergal (2022). The anatomy of the transmission of macroprudential policies. Journal of Finance, 77 (5), 2533-2575.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Crosignani, Matteo, Eisert, Tim, Steffen, Sascha (2022). Zombie Lending: Theoretical, International, and Historical Perspectives. Annual Review of Financial Economics, 14, 21-38.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian, Hirsch, Christian (2019). Whatever it takes: The real effects of unconventional monetary policy. Review Of Financial Studies, 32 (9), 3366-3411.
  • Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian (2019). Interbank networks and backdoor bailouts: Benefiting from other banks' government guarantees. Management Science, 65 (8), 3673-3693.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian, Hirsch, Christian (2018). Real effects of the sovereign debt crisis in Europe: Evidence from syndicated loans. Review Of Financial Studies, 31 (8), 2855-2896.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian, Hirsch, Christian (2018). Same story, different place? Post-crisis recapitalization of banks in Japan and Europe. Finance and Investment. : The European Case. Oxford University Press, 137-147.