
Pierre Mabille
Assistant Professor of Finance
Biography
Pierre Mabille is an Assistant Professor of Finance. He joined INSEAD after graduating from École Normale Supérieure and ENSAE Paris in France, and obtaining a PhD in Economics from New York University, Stern School of Business.
Pierre teaches in the MBA and PhD programmes. His research interests are in macro-finance, asset pricing, household finance, and real estate. His recent work studies the financial determinants of changes in credit, and their interactions with the cross-section of regions, households, and firms. His papers have been published in leading academic journals such as the Review of Economic Studies, Review of Financial Studies, and International Journal of Economics and Finance. He has been awarded the CEPR-TFI Household Finance Award and the AREUEA Homer Hoyt Dissertation Award.
Pierre teaches in the MBA and PhD programmes. His research interests are in macro-finance, asset pricing, household finance, and real estate. His recent work studies the financial determinants of changes in credit, and their interactions with the cross-section of regions, households, and firms. His papers have been published in leading academic journals such as the Review of Economic Studies, Review of Financial Studies, and International Journal of Economics and Finance. He has been awarded the CEPR-TFI Household Finance Award and the AREUEA Homer Hoyt Dissertation Award.
Latest posts
In the US, Owning a Home May Not Lead to a Better Life
Pierre Mabille
Policies meant to help lower-income Americans purchase homes may be perpetuating the Black-white wealth gap.
Affordable Homes for the Poor Can Boost Collective Well-Being
Pierre Mabille
For all their much-studied drawbacks, affordable housing policies can be a net positive for the aggregate welfare of city dwellers.
The Missing Millennial Homebuyers
Pierre Mabille
Property prices fell during the Great Recession, but millions of millennials in the US still couldn’t afford their first homes. Here’s why – and how we could tackle the next housing crisis better.