Generated by GPT-5-mini| Amsterdam School of Economics | |
|---|---|
| Name | Amsterdam School of Economics |
| Established | 2000 |
| Type | Public |
| City | Amsterdam |
| Country | Netherlands |
| Parent | University of Amsterdam |
Amsterdam School of Economics The Amsterdam School of Economics is the economics faculty of the University of Amsterdam located in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It trains undergraduate and graduate students in applied and theoretical fields and conducts research in microeconomics, macroeconomics, econometrics, and finance. The school collaborates with municipal partners, international universities, and research institutes in Europe and beyond.
The school traces institutional roots to the 17th-century commercial activity of Amsterdam and later to academic developments at the Athenaeum Illustre and the modern University of Amsterdam. In the 20th century, economists associated with the school interacted with figures from Rotterdam and Leiden University and contributed to postwar reconstruction alongside policymakers from The Hague and institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. During the 1970s and 1980s scholars from the school published in venues linked to Cowles Commission traditions and exchanged research with groups at London School of Economics, Harvard University, and Princeton University. Reorganization in the early 2000s aligned the unit under the University of Amsterdam's faculty structure, increasing collaboration with centers such as the Tinbergen Institute and networks including the European Economic Association.
The faculty is organized into departments and units that mirror traditional economic subfields. Departments include Microeconomics and Public Economics, Macroeconomics and International Economics, Econometrics and Operations Research, and Finance and Accounting. The school maintains administrative ties with the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences at the University of Amsterdam and partners with the Amsterdam Business School and the Faculty of Law for interdisciplinary programs. Governance involves a board of directors, departmental chairs, and advisory committees that engage stakeholders from institutions like the Dutch Central Bank (De Nederlandsche Bank), the European Central Bank, and corporate partners such as ING Group and ABN AMRO.
Programs span bachelor, master, and doctoral levels. Undergraduate offerings include a Bachelor in Economics and Business Economics that coordinates with curriculum elements found at Erasmus University Rotterdam's economics programs. Graduate pathways comprise MSc tracks in Economics, Econometrics, Finance, and Behavioural Economics with exchange options at institutions such as Columbia University, University of Cambridge, and University of California, Berkeley. A joint PhD trajectory is run with the Tinbergen Institute and doctoral supervision links to research groups associated with NWO grants and European projects funded by the Horizon 2020 framework. Executive education and summer schools are offered in collaboration with INSEAD and regional training providers.
Research themes include macrofinance, labor and population economics, health economics, industrial organisation, and econometric methods. Research centers affiliated with the school include specialized institutes for Econometrics and Operations Research, the Behavioural Economics Lab, and units cooperating with the Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Labour Studies and the Amsterdam School for Social Science Research. Faculty publish in journals associated with outlets like the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, and Econometrica and secure competitive funding from organisations such as the European Research Council and national funders including Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research. Collaborative projects engage partners such as OECD, World Trade Organization, and municipal research offices of Amsterdam.
The school is recognized in international rankings for its research output and doctoral training; assessments reference metrics used by the Times Higher Education Supplement and the QS World University Rankings. Subject-level evaluations compare performance with peer departments at London School of Economics, Stockholm School of Economics, and Bocconi University. Citation and publication indicators often benchmark against leading institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University in specific subfields like econometrics and finance.
Admission to bachelor programs aligns with Dutch secondary qualification systems and international equivalency procedures; master's admissions require prior degrees similar to those from University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, or Yale University depending on the track. Student services coordinate with university-wide bodies such as VSNU and student associations like Economics Students Association and housing partners in central Amsterdam. Extracurricular offerings include seminar series featuring speakers from De Nederlandsche Bank, the European Commission, and international research visitors from Princeton University and University of Chicago.
Alumni hold positions across academia, government, and industry, including roles at De Nederlandsche Bank, the European Central Bank, IMF, World Bank, and multinational corporations like Shell plc and Philips. Notable faculty and former staff have collaborated with scholars from Tinbergen-linked lineages and engaged in networks with economists associated with Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences laureates and institutions such as Cowles Foundation and Centre for Economic Policy Research. Many alumni pursue doctoral studies at Harvard University, Princeton University, London School of Economics, and research careers at think tanks including Bruegel and RAND Corporation.