Contacts

Contacts

Mario Mariniello

 

info@mariomariniello.com

 

For press enquiries and speaking engagements:

 

outreach@mariomariniello.com

Mario Mariniello

Mario Mariniello is the author of "Digital Economic Policy", Oxford University Press 2022. He is Non-Resident Fellow at the Brussels based think-tank Bruegel and Visiting Professor at the College of Europe in Natolin, Poland. He formerly taught at the University of Namur, the Université Libre de Bruxelles, and the University of Florence.

His main interests are the economics of digital marketscompetition policy and the impact of technology in labour markets.

Mario was Senior Fellow at Bruegel, where he launched and led the “Future of Work and Inclusive Growth” project. He also previously led Bruegel's digital and competition policy research agenda.

He was Digital Adviser at the European Political Strategy Centre (EPSC), a European Commission in-house think-tank that operated under the authority of the former Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, a member of the Chief Economist Team at DG Competition (the Commission’s antitrust department), and worked on the use of AI in workplaces at the Commission’s DG Employment.

Mario holds a Ph.D. in Industrial Organization from the European University Institute (Florence) and a M.Sc. in Economics from CORIPE (Turin). He is currently pursuing a bachelor degree in Philosophy at KU Leuven.

DIGITAL ECONOMIC POLICY

The Economics of Digital Markets from a European Union Perspective

Digital Economic Policy is a first-of-its-kind textbook covering all policy dimensions of the digital economy at the European level. It is a journey during which students may learn about telecom markets, the data economy, the digitization of the public sector, cybersecurity, the platform economy, liability for online content, e-commerce, the sharing economy, the impact of technology on labour markets, digital inequality, disinformation, and artificial intelligence.

The book's primary goal is to prepare students to give informed and economically sound advice to an EU policymaker for digital affairs.