Generated by GPT-5-mini| École d'économie de Toulouse | |
|---|---|
| Name | École d'économie de Toulouse |
| Native name | École d'économie de Toulouse |
| Established | 2006 |
| Type | Research and higher education consortium |
| City | Toulouse |
| Country | France |
École d'économie de Toulouse is a consortium of higher education and research institutions based in Toulouse, France, bringing together faculties, research units, and graduate programs to concentrate expertise in applied microeconomics and public policy analysis. It interfaces with national research organizations and European funding bodies to shape policy-relevant work across taxation, regulation, innovation, and competition, drawing scholars and students from international networks such as European Commission, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and United Nations.
The project emerged in the mid-2000s amid reforms affecting French higher education alongside initiatives driven by Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Innovation (France), the Agence nationale de la recherche, and regional actors including Occitanie (administrative region), Mairie de Toulouse and Conseil régional de Midi-Pyrénées. Founders built on preexisting laboratories associated with Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, Institut national de recherche en informatique et en automatique, and local Grandes Écoles such as Institut d'études politiques de Toulouse and INSA Toulouse to create a branded center complementary to institutions like Toulouse School of Economics and national hubs such as École Polytechnique and École Normale Supérieure. Early milestones included grant awards from European Research Council and partnerships with Agence française de développement and Fondation pour la recherche stratégique.
Governance structures reflect a collaboration among member institutions including Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, Université Toulouse III — Paul Sabatier, CNRS, and specialized schools like ENAC and Toulouse Business School. Administrative oversight involves boards drawing representatives from Conseil d'État (France), Cour des comptes (France), and regional bodies such as Medef affiliates and civic stakeholders like Chambre de commerce et d'industrie de Toulouse. Funding streams mix competitive grants from European Investment Bank, national contracts with Ministry of Economy and Finance (France), and private endowments resembling models used by Carnegie Mellon University and London School of Economics. Executive leaders coordinate with research directors and program managers to align with standards employed by Agence d'évaluation de la recherche et de l'enseignement supérieur and accreditation norms seen at Conférence des Grandes Écoles.
Academic offerings span graduate degrees in applied microeconometrics, industrial organization, public economics, and behavioral studies linking to programs at Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, Sciences Po, and European exchanges with Universität Mannheim and Università Bocconi. Doctoral supervision aligns with doctoral schools affiliated with CNRS and doctoral consortia patterned after European University Institute. Curriculum development draws on methodologies popularized at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University, and Princeton University while emphasizing policy-relevant training used by European Central Bank, Bank of France, and Autorité de la concurrence (France). Research outputs include journals comparable to Quarterly Journal of Economics, Journal of Political Economy, and American Economic Review in topics like taxation, innovation policy, and health economics relevant to agencies such as Haute Autorité de Santé and Agence nationale de sécurité du médicament et des produits de santé.
Faculty include scholars with profiles similar to recipients of awards like the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, the Yrjö Jahnsson Award, and the CNRS Silver Medal, and who have previously held positions at University of Chicago, Stanford University, Columbia University, and University of California, Berkeley. Alumni have taken roles at institutions including European Commission, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Banque de France, Ministry of Finance (France), and international organizations such as World Bank and International Monetary Fund. Visiting fellows have included researchers affiliated with Oxford University, Cambridge University, Yale University, and policy experts from Bruegel and Brookings Institution.
Associated centers mirror structures found at National Bureau of Economic Research and include units focusing on industrial organization, spatial economics, environmental economics, and health policy with links to national laboratories like INRAE and technological partners such as CNES and Thales. Institutes coordinate cross-disciplinary projects with faculties of law at Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, engineering departments at INSA Toulouse, and business labs at Toulouse Business School, engaging with funding and programmatic partners including Horizon 2020, European Research Council, and philanthropic organizations like Fondation de France.
The consortium's research impact is assessed alongside specialized schools such as Toulouse School of Economics and national research units evaluated by CNRS and ranked in thematic assessments like those from RePEc, Times Higher Education, and QS World University Rankings for subject areas connected to public policy, industrial organization, and econometrics. Reputation among policymakers and academic peers draws on collaborations and citations in outlets referenced by Le Monde, Financial Times, and policy reports from OECD and European Commission.
Collaborative networks extend to universities across Europe and North America including University of Cambridge, London School of Economics, ETH Zurich, Bocconi University, and New York University, and to think tanks and public agencies such as Bruegel, Institut Montaigne, Banque de France, and Autorité de la concurrence (France). Industry partnerships involve firms and consortia like Airbus, Capgemini, EDF, and regional clusters coordinated with Toulouse Métropole and the Pôle de compétitivité Aerospace Valley.
Category:Research institutes in France