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Ph.D. in Economics (International Finance) at Sciences-Po Paris, Pilar Nogues-Marco is an Associate Professor in Economic History at the University of Geneva (Paul Bairoch Institute), Research Fellow at Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) and Trustee of the European Historical Economics Society (EHES). Her research focuses on monetary and financial history from the early modern period to nowadays. Before joining the University of Geneva in 2015, she held teaching and research positions at Carlos III University of Madrid, University Pompeu Fabra, Sciences-Po Paris and University of Barcelona. Hamilton Prize 2020 to the best article published in international journals, awarded by the Spanish Association of Economic History, for the article: Nogues-Marco, P., Herranz-Loncán, A. and Aslandinis, N. (2019): The making of a national currency. Spatial transaction costs and money market integration in Spain (1825-1874), Journal of Economic History, 79 (4), pp. 1094-1128 (summary) CV Pilar Nogues-Marco Google Scholar ORCID
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Jobst, C. & Nogues-Marco, P. (2012): “Commercial finance in Europe, 1700-1815”, Gerard Caprio (ed.), Handbooks in Financial Globalization: Handbook of Key Global Financial Markets, Institutions and Infrastructure, London: Elsevier, pp. 95-105
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- Martín-Aceña, P., Martínez-Ruiz, E. & Nogues-Marco, P. (2011): “Floating against the Tide: Spanish Monetary Policy, 1870-1931”, Anders Ögren & Lars F. Øksendal (eds.), The Gold Standard Peripheries: Monetary Policy, Adjustment and Flexibility in a Global Setting, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 145-173 (UC3M WP 11-10)
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- Flandreau, M., Galimard, C., Jobst, C. and Nogues-Marco, P. (2009): Monetary Geography Before the Industrial Revolution. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, vol.2, issue 2, pp.149-171 (CEPR discussion paper 7169)
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- Flandreau, M., Galimard, C., Jobst, C. and Nogues-Marco, P. (2009): "The Bell Jar: Commercial Interest Rates between Two Revolutions, 1688-1789", in Jeremy Atack and Larry Neal (ed.), The Origins and Development of Financial Markets and Institutions. From the Seventeenth Century to the Present, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 161-208 (CEPR discussion paper 5940)
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