The Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis-Europe (RCEA-Europe) at DEMS-UNIMIB, the Leibniz Institute for Financial Research SAFE of the Goethe University Frankfurt, and the European Central Bank, invite submissions for The Third International Conference on the Climate-Macro-Finance Interface (3CMFI): "Emerging Macroeconomic, Financial, and Environmental Policy Challenges in an Era of Policrises and Rising Uncertainties”.
The foundations and institutions of the post-World War II financial order are being rattled, hampering supranational decision-making. At the same time, the fundamentals of the integrated global economy, which has brought welfare to many countries, are being rocked. While these crises are intensifying, the increasing frequency and severity of extreme weather events, the unabated deterioration of the natural environment, and biodiversity loss provide evidence that a more profound existential crisis is also unfolding. While new technologies and economies of scale are progressing rapidly, mounting competition over rare earths and critical minerals essential for the Green Transition is hampering it. This existential struggle is hindered by several concurrent challenges, including the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, which exacerbate existing risks to global trade and supply chains. Rising tariffs and trade restrictions resulting from policy changes in the US, as well as retaliatory measures in China, Europe, and other industrialized countries, could lead to higher inflation and slower global economic growth. Such deepening of the ongoing "deglobalization" trend could lead to increased price volatility, supply chain vulnerabilities, and financial tensions. The world economy is vulnerable to a complex interplay of significant uncertainties and volatility shaping the global economic and financial landscape. This is already evident from the adverse financial market developments triggered by trade policy changes, economic policy uncertainty, and the ongoing slowdown in growth. The uncertain impact of the rapid ascent of artificial intelligence on labor markets and cybersecurity, as well as the AI-empowered diffusion and manipulation of fake news, adds further elements of international economic decoupling and risk.
Against this backdrop, the conference seeks to bring together academics and policymakers to discuss policy challenges and inform the development of policy solutions in an emerging regime of political crises, rising uncertainties, and macro-financial volatility.
Topics of particular interest for the conference are:
De-globalization effects on labor and product markets
Supply chains and international trade disruptions
Planetary boundaries, extreme weather, biodiversity loss trends, and their macro-financial impact
AI-deepening and diffusion and its macroeconomic effects
Regional and global economic, financial, and economic policy international decoupling
Productivity slowdown
The Macro-Finance of the Green Transition
The end of the Great Moderation, the emerging new macroeconomic regime, and challenges for fiscal, monetary, and macroprudential policies in multi-crisis contexts
Policy challenges from persistent adverse supply-side developments and compounded macroeconomic, financial, and geopolitical risks and uncertainties
Scenario generation and stress tests under a multi-crisis context (geopolitical, environmental, …)
Econometric tools for policy analysis and forecasting macro-financial variables and extreme-weather events in a multi-crisis environment.
Keynote Speakers
TBA
Invited plenary sessions
TBA
Venue
The conference is in-person and will be held at the Leibniz Institute for Financial Research SAFE, Goethe University Frankfurt, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 3, 60323 Frankfurt am Main (Germany).
The Conference Program will be available here
Conference Social Event
TBA
Registrations will open in December
Deadlines
Paper submission deadline: 15 December 2025
Notification: 22 December 2025
Registration for contributors: 22 December 2025-12 January 2026
Late Registration for contributors: 13-20 January 2026
Late Registration for non-contributors ends on 8 March 2026
Registration Fee
Non-Corporate
Early fee: €TBA (standard); €TBA (PhD students)
Late fee: €TBA (standard); €TBA (PhD students)
Corporate fee: €TBA
The registration fee includes the daily catering. No refunds are available.
Organizers
Florian Heider (SAFE and Goethe University Frankfurt)
Francesco Paolo Mongelli (Goethe University Frankfurt)
Claudio Morana (University of Milano-Bicocca)
Caroline Willeke (European Central Bank)
Local Organizers
Tobias Berg (Goethe University Frankfurt)
Florian Heider (SAFE and Goethe University Frankfurt)
Francesco Paolo Mongelli (Goethe University Frankfurt)
Scientific Committee
TBA
Contact: RCEA
Our Sponsors: