Arna Olafsson is an Associate Professor of Finance at Copenhagen Business School and a research fellow at the Danish Finance Institute. She received her Ph.D. from the Stockholm School of Economics in 2014 and spent two years as a visiting student at the Economics Department at UC Berkeley. Her main areas of research are household finance, behavioral finance, consumer credit, and labor and finance. A unifying theme in her research is enhancing our understanding of the financial lives of individuals and household. Her current research analyzes transaction-level bank data on, e.g., income, expenditures, account balances, portfolio holdings and loans. She has also collaborated with her data providers to merge the data with experimental data.
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Households’ inaction in the deposit market
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- Financial Markets 
- Monetary Policy
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Why households with low-interest savings hold expensive debt
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- Microeconomic regulation
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The ostrich in us: Selective attention to personal finances
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- Frontiers of economic research
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The retirement-consumption puzzle: New evidence from personal finances
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- Financial Markets 
- Labour Markets
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The hidden victims of the Global Crisis
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- Global crisis 
- Health Economics