'Our University Is Growing Together with the April Conference'
April 19th marks the official start of the XVII April International Academic Conference on Economic and Social Development. Below, HSE Academic Supervisor Evgeny Yasin, who is also the Chairman of the Conference’s Programme Committee, discusses what participants can expect from this year’s conference.
In a certain sense, the April Conference is a type of business card for the Higher School of Economics. Most of the conferences that international universities hold typically focus on either classical or applied science, but such conferences have practically no agenda for large-scale reforms. This is what makes the HSE’s April Conference unique; it plays an active role in the transformations that are taking place in our country. Our university has grown together with the April Conference – starting with the fairly narrow spectrum of problems that had to be overcome throughout the process of reform and ending with the point at which we could consider ourselves to be equal participants in the global academic process as concerns economics and its related disciplines.
Our conference, like our university, is a living organism in that we’re constantly growing and changing. This year, the conference’s plenary sessions, of which there are many, will take place in a new format. It truly is a great thing to see HSE alumni participate in the academic discussions, and there are more and more of them every year. Some key alumni taking part in this year’s plenary session on macroeconomics are Maxim Oreshkin, Russian Deputy Finance Minister, and Konstantin Noskov, the Head of the Analytical Centre for the Government of Russia.
This year we’ve decided to take an important step in the evolution of the Conference
This session will open the conference and be of particular interest not only because of its participants, who include the Deputy Chairman and Chief Economist of Vnesheconombank, Andrei Klepach, but also because of the papers being presented. Key presenters include Evsei Gurvich, who is the Head of the Economic Expert Group, and First Deputy Governor of the Russian Central Bank, Ksenia Yudaeva.
Overall, all of the plenary sessions feature intriguing papers that, I hope, inspire substantive discussions. The conference will include papers by researchers from outside the Higher School of Economics as well. I am personally looking forward to the paper Lev Gudkov, Director of the Levada Center*, is presenting at the session on Wealth and the Dynamics of Social Structure. And, of course, we can all look forward to the paper Victor Polterovich, Mathematical Economics Laboratory Chief at the RAS Central Economics and Mathematics Institute (CEMI), is planning to present at the session on Values, Institutions, and Trust. This session will also feature talks by the Dean of Moscow State University’s Economics Faculty, Alexander Auzan; HSE Professor Alexander Arkhangelsky*; and, we are hoping, Alexei Kudrin, who is the Dean of the Faculty of Liberal Arts and Sciences at St. Petersburg State University.
In addition, I would like to propose a topic for discussion: how institutional reform programmes should depend on civil culture
Victor Polterovich
Mathematical Economics Laboratory Chief at CEMI
And of course, I’d also like to invite everyone to attend the session featuring the paper, “The Russian Economy: Problems, Solutions, Consequences,” authored by Natalia Akindinova, Yaroslav Kuzminov, and myself. In this paper, we have come up with four possible trajectories for our economy, and we discuss the likelihood of these scenarios based on a survey of various experts.
I also consider Lilia Ovcharova’s paper on investing in human capital to be very important. She’ll present the paper at the plenary session on social policy.
All political parties can consider this paper to be our view on entering a growth trajectory
Lilia Ovcharova
HSE Director for Social Studies
This year’s sessions cover practically all economic disciplines studied at HSE: economics, macroeconomics, microeconomics, industrial markets, etc. New sessions are arising as well, and we are not just pulling them out of thin air. The April Conference’s programme is developed in two stages. In the first stage, we collect all of the proposals that researchers send us, and we group them into blocks. In the second stage, with the opinions of our researchers in mind, we identify the most important topics and reach out to the experts we’d like to see at the conference. Such a combinatory approach yields the most interesting results.
* Решением Минюста РФ Левада-Центр включён в реестр некоммерческих организаций, выполняющих функции иностранного агента.
* A. Arkhangelsky (Александр Архангельский) включен Минюстом в реестр иностранных агентов.
See also:
‘The World Is Becoming More Complex and Less Predictable’: What Scientists Say about the Future
The future is now more difficult for researchers to forecast, and events that are hard to predict are playing an increasingly significant role. But there is good news too: scientists are confident that humanity will adapt to any changes. This was the focus of discussion at the International Symposium ‘Foresight in a Rapidly Changing World,’ which took place as part of the 25th Yasin (April) International Academic Conference.
Fragmentation and Bloc Formation: How the Global Economy is Changing
Sergey Dubinin, former head of the Bank of Russia and Professor of Finance and Credit at the Faculty of Economics at Moscow State University, has delivered an honorary address at the XXV Yasin (April) International Academic Conference. He spoke about the transformation of the global monetary and financial system, as well as the Russian economy.
More Children, More Happiness: HSE Experts Study Impact of Number of Children on Russians' Assessment of Happiness
Russians with children feel happier than those without children. At the same time, the number of children influences the assessment of happiness: the more children Russians have, the happier they feel. These conclusions were outlined inthe report ‘More Children, More Happiness: The Impact of the Number of Children on Russians’ Assessment of Happiness,’ presented at the XXV Yasin (April) International Academic Conference on Economic and Social Development, held on April 15–18 at HSE University. The study was conducted by Elena Churilova, Senior Research Fellow, and Dmitry Jdanov, Chief Research Fellowat HSE International Laboratory for Population and Health.
HSE Expands Cooperation with Gulf Countries
HSE University and the Centre for International Policy Research (Qatar) have agreed to collaborate in the field of social sciences, with plans for joint research, academic exchanges, and regular expert engagement. The agreement was signed during the roundtable ‘State Capacity and State Resilience in the Global South,’ held as part of the 25th Yasin (April) International Academic Conference at HSE University.
‘We Grow Old before We Become Rich’: How BRICS Countries Can Achieve Economic Growth
Due to population aging, many countries aiming for economic prosperity have limited time left to undergo economic transformation, according to the honorary report Narratives Versus Reality on Employment and Demography: How Undermining Institutions Can Push Countries Out of the ‘Narrow Corridor’ by Santosh Mehrotra of the University of Bath. The report was presented at the XXV Yasin (April) International Academic Conference.
XXV Yasin (April) Academic Conference Kicks Off at HSE University
The anniversary 25th Yasin (April) International Academic Conference on Economic and Social Development will take place from April 15 to 18. This year, over a thousand applications were submitted to present at the conference, of which the Programme Committee selected 381 of the best research papers in their respective fields.
HSE University Announces Call for Proposals to Attend Anniversary Yasin Conference
HSE University invites submissions of proposals with academic reports for participation in the 25th Yasin (April) International Academic Conference (YIAC). The conference programme, centred on five research themes addressing issues of economic and social development, will retain its interdisciplinary focus and welcome participation from leading scientists in Russia and around the globe. The key events of the 25th Yasin Conference will be taking place in Moscow from April 15 to 18, 2025.
25th Yasin (April) International Academic Conference Now Accepting Proposals
Reports on new research results will be presented and discussed as part of the conference’s sections. These reports will be selected based on reviews of proposals. As always, the conference programme features expert discussions of the most pressing economic, social, internal and external issues in the format of roundtables and associated events.
Academic Council: HSE University’s Contribution to Achieving National Goals and Development Priorities to Increase
HSE University’s Development Programme until 2030 will be improved in order to increase the university’s contribution to achieving national goals and implementing the priorities of the country’s scientific and technological development. This decision was made by the university’s Academic Council on April 26. The meeting also addressed the principles for the development of HSE University’s external communications, one of which is the creation of a high-quality information field around the university.
Keeping Up with the Neighbours: Envy as a Driver of Economic Growth
Classical economic theory assumes that economic agents are entirely self-interested and rational in their pursuit of material well-being, and that they are not affected by external factors. As a result, externalities are not considered in any way when constructing economic models. Nevertheless, some sociologists argue for a revision of modern economic theory to incorporate the ethical dimensions of economic agents' behaviour. Kirill Borissov, Professor of the Faculty of Economics at the European University in St Petersburg, spoke at the XXIV Yasin (April) International Academic Conference and shared his observations from creating his own economic model incorporating the factor of envy.
Lev Jakobson
HSE First Vice Rector