YSI Member Profile Image

Nationality: Mexico

Affiliation: Università degli Studi di Siena

Student status: Student

Level of education: Don't share

Field of Study: Economics

Joined: November 29, 2017

Social Media Profiles:

Linkedin Profile

Twitter Profile

Manuel Valencia

Siena, IT

Member: Financial Stability, History of Economic Thought, Philosophy of Economics, Economic History, Keynesian Economics, Latin America, Core, States and Markets, Inequality, Economic Development

Coordinator: Latin America

Research Interests

  • Agent Based Modeling
  • Center and Periphery
  • Classical Political Economy
  • Economic History
  • History of Economic Thought
  • Innovation
  • Keynesian Economics
  • Latin America
  • Macroeconomics
  • Marxian Economics
  • Philosophy of Economics
  • Political Economy
  • Political Economy of Development
  • Sustainability
  • Teaching Economics
  • Value Theory

About

Greetings! I am currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Economics at the Università degli Studi di Siena. My academic journey includes a bachelor's degree in Economics from the Universidad de Sonora, as well as a dual master's degree in Economic Policies for Global Transition 2.0 (EPOG 2) from the Berlin School of Economics and Law and Université Sorbonne Paris Nord. Additionally, I have completed a one-year specialization program in the History of Economic Thought at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM). In conjunction with my academic pursuits, I have gained valuable experience as a research assistant, and I have served as a teacher/professor at both high school and university levels. Furthermore, I have actively involved in policy consulting

About my research

In my undergrad, I focused on Mexican municipal finance and economic linkages in the northern region. During my history of economic thought specialization, I explored Latin American Marxian development, compared structuralism and dependency theory, and examined the interaction between Latin American structuralism and Keynesian economics. In my master's, I delved into the political economy of Latin America, analyzing growth models and distribution. My PhD research centered on investigating the past macroeconomic impacts of energy transition in developing economies and reassessing Classical Political Economy.