This PhD position will be within the Behavioural Economics research group. We are looking for a full time PhD student starting on September 1, 2025. The topic if the PhD project should fall within the intersection of behavioral finance and economics. Broadly, the topic will address “understanding and improving financial decision-making”. This includes general decision making under risk, but more specifically topics like sustainable investments, the moral aspects of investments, financial regulation, and financial advice.
Job description Aligned with the general vision of the Behavioural Economics research group, the prospective PhD student will advance our understanding of human behaviour and the factors that shape it. The particular aim of this PhD vacancy is to understand and improve financial decision making – to understand how individuals make decisions in highly complex financial environments, which factors drive their behavior, and how we can help them to make better financial decisions. The project will combine quantitative research methods, mostly the design and quantitative evaluation of experiments. More information on the members and research of the group is available here:
https://www.eur.nl/en/ese/department-applied-economics/behavioural-economics/people The successful candidate will be supervised by dr J.E. Rose and at least one other member of this research group. The Behavioural Economics group is a part of the Department of Applied Economics of the Erasmus School of Economics (ESE). The group’s research is on the intersection of economics, finance, and psychology. As such, most members are affiliated with the Tinbergen Institute and/or the Erasmus Research Institute in Management (ERIM). This interdisciplinary approach also shows in the publication record of the group, which encompasses top economics, finance, psychology, management, and political science journals such as Econometrica, The Review of Financial Studies, Management Science, Experimental Economics, Nature Communications, Psychological Science, the American Political Science Review, European Economic Review, Journal of Economic Psychology, and many more.
The successful candidate will be able to choose an affiliation with ERIM or Tinbergen Institute depending on personal preference and the specific research topic. The specific topic of the research project is open and will be determined in coordination between the candidate and supervisors within the broader topic described above.
As a final output, the candidate is expected to write at least 3 academic papers (cumulative PhD thesis) with the aim to be submitted to journals in Economics, Finance, and related fields during or after the PhD trajectory.