Bendheim Center for Finance (BCF) is an interdisciplinary center at Princeton University. It was established in 1997 at the initiative of Ben Bernanke and is dedicated to research and education in the area of money and finance, in lieu of there not being a full professional business school at Princeton.[1]
The Bendheim Center for Finance obtained a stellar academic reputation within few years, benefiting from its faculty's focus on financial imperfections and behavioral elements which experienced an unprecedented boost in public interest and academic research after the burst of the dot-com bubble in 2000. Similarly, the faculty's empirical research on housing and theories incorporating financial frictions and the financial sector into macro and monetary models contributed to the Bendheim Center's outstanding reputation as these are at the heart of the rethinking of macroeconomics, monetary economics, financial regulation, and the international financial architecture triggered by the great recession.[16][17]
The master in finance program particularly addresses students aiming at a career in quantitative finance and asset management, risk management, FinTechs, macroeconomic and financial forecasting, quantitative trading, or applied research. While the program generally takes four semesters, a two-semester version is available to students with strong prior knowledge.[24] The BCF's Master in Finance puts strong emphasis on financial economics, data analysis and technology, and computational methods.[25] Due to the quantitative focus of the courses, the master program is also attractive for students with strong corresponding prior knowledge such as physicists.[26] Approximately 35 students corresponding to 5 percent of applicants are admitted to the program each year.[27] The New York Sun describes the program as a popular alternative to an MBA, particularly for students striving for a career in trading or in financial companies.[28]
Ph.D. program
The BCF does not offer a distinct Ph.D. program, but provides a home for Ph.D. students in economics, operations research, mathematics, and further fields who are interested in finance-related topics.[29] In addition to supervision, the BCF offers courses on finance and related topics.[30] The center also hosts a weekly student research workshop.[31]
Seminars, lecture series, and conferences
In addition to the student research workshop, the BCF hosts a weekly finance seminar. The center organizes the "Princeton Finance Lectures" delivered by one outstanding finance scholar each year. In the past years, lectures were given by Raghuram Rajan, Jeremy Stein, Ben Bernanke, Andrei Shleifer, Robert Shiller, Robert Engle, Robert C. Merton, and Lars Peter Hansen.[32] The BCF regularly hosts conferences. Past conferences dealt with topics such as escalating risks in China and FinTech.[33] Each year, the BCF co-organizes the "Princeton Initiative: Macro, Money and Finance", which brings together about 75 Ph.D. students from various universities to explore the latest research at the intersection between macro, monetary, and financial economics.[34] In the center's career speaker series, guests from industry, government, and academia cover a broad range of topics, addressing both graduate and undergraduate students.[35]