Stefano Ugolini is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Toulouse (Sciences Po Toulouse and LEREPS). He was educated at Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa (MA modern history, 2004), Sciences Po, Paris (PhD international finance, 2009), and the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva (Norges Bank post-doctoral fellowship, 2010). A specialist in monetary and financial history, he has contributed to the research projects of a number of central banks. Dr Ugolini’s research provides long-term views on topical economic issues, including – among others – central banking, monetary policy, foreign exchange regimes, financial crises, economic integration, market microstructure, and the microeconomics of banking. He is the author of The Evolution of Central Banking: Theory and History (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).
Discussion paper
DP15715 Pandemic Recession, Helicopter Money and Central Banking: Venice, 1630
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- Central Banking
Discussion paper
DP13661 International Trade Finance From the Origins to the Present: Market Structures, Regulation, and Governance
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- International trade 
- Financial Regulation and Banking

VoxEU Column
When credibility is not enough: Fiscal dominance, monetary policy, and exchange rates in early modern Venice
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- Economic history 
- Monetary Policy

VoxEU Column
Helicopter money in another pandemic recession: Venice, 1630
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- Monetary Policy 
- Economic history

VoxEU Column
Robust money markets: Lessons from the first globalisation
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- Economic history 
- Financial Regulation and Banking 
- International Finance

VoxEU Column
The normality of extraordinary monetary reactions to huge real shocks
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- COVID-19 
- Economic history 
- Monetary Policy

VoxEU Column
The structure of global trade finance: A very long-run view
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- Economic history 
- International trade