
Nationality: Germany
Affiliation: University of Duisburg-Essen
Student Status: Student
Level of Education: Ph.D.
Field of Study: Computer Science
Joined: October 7, 2016
Johannes Tiemer
Essen, DE
Member: Political Economy of Europe, Latin America, Core, Commons
Organizer: Complexity Economics
Working groups
Research Interests
- Agent Based Modeling
- Bubbles
- Business Cycles
- Capital controls
- Central Banking
- Complexity Economics
- Computational economics
- Credit
- Credit Risk
- Culture and Norms
- Currency
- Econometrics
- Economic Growth
- Economic History
- Economic Modeling
- Endogenous Money
- European Political Economy
- Evolutionary economics
- Exchange rates
- Finance
- Imperfect Knowledge Economics
- Inflation
- Institutional Economics
- International Financial Institutions
- International Institutions
- International Trade
- Law and Economics
- Macroeconomics
- Mathematics
- Monetary Economics
- Monetary Policy
- Money
- Networks
- Nonlinear Dynamics
- Open source
- Statistics
- System dynamics
- Teaching Economics
- Technology Development
- Transparency
- Value Theory
About
Trying to get my ideas in complexity econ and monetary econ published. Interested in society and complex systems. Technology I use: Python, PyTorch, NumPy, Pandas, PostgreSQL, ArangoDB, MongoDB, RabbitMQ, Scrapy, Kubernetes/Docker, JavaScript, Vue/Nuxt … to implement data centric systems. I have a huge backlog of books I'd like to read. I got into this YSI thing in 2012 and by accident ended up being a founding member and coordinator of the Complexity Economics Group. Life is difficult.
About my research
Dude … hit me up when you meet me at a conference (and bring some time). Relevant questions: - What is money? - Why is society so broken? - What network effects are there in economic systems? - Why do so many people believe that equilibrium based methods should be used for forecasting