Inequality and Economic Development in the European Periphery: The Fate of Poland.
Marcin Wroński is an assistant professor at SGH Warsaw School of Economics. His research lies at the intersection of economics and economic history. Wroński is a voting member of the Financial Supervision Authority (FIN-FSA) and a fellow of the World Inequality Database, the Global Labor Organization, and the CERGE-EI Foundation. Previously, Wroński was a consultant at the World Bank Global Poverty & Equity Group, and a consultant in the private sector.
At the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies (CES), Wrónski will write a monograph on the long-run evolution of economic inequality and social mobility in Poland. Specifically, the project will discuss the interdependence between economic inequality, economic development, social structure, political and social institutions, gender roles, and ethnic/religious divisions.
This information is accurate for the time period that the visiting scholar is affiliated with CES.
Inequality and Economic Development in the European Periphery: The Fate of Poland.
Wroński, Marcin "Wealth inequality in interwar Poland", Economic History of Developing Regions," 2024. https://doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2022.2082407
Wroński, Marcin. “The full Distribution of Adult Height in Poland: Cohorts Born Between 1920 and 1996. The Biological Cost of the Economic Transition,” Economics & Human Biology, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2023.101261
Wroński, Marcin. “Intergenerational Educational Mobility in Poland in the Long Run Education as a Positional Good,” Eastern European Economics, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1080/00128775.2023.2191857