ENSAE Paris: Difference between revisions
m No source saying that this school is "one of the most prestigeous" |
m →External links: Task 15: language icon template(s) replaced (2×); |
||
Line 148: | Line 148: | ||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
*[http://www.ensae.fr '''ENSAE''' website]—{{ |
*[http://www.ensae.fr '''ENSAE''' website]—{{in lang|fr}} |
||
*[http://www.ensae.org ENSAE Alumni]—{{ |
*[http://www.ensae.org ENSAE Alumni]—{{in lang|fr}} |
||
Revision as of 14:35, 28 December 2019
École nationale de la statistique et de l'administration économique Paris | |
Motto | Compter pour savoir, comprendre pour prévoir |
---|---|
Motto in English | Count for knowledge, grasp to forecast |
Type | Grande Ecole |
Established | 1942 |
President | Pierre Biscourp |
Academic staff | 49 |
Students | 581[1] |
Location | , |
Campus | Paris-Saclay |
Nickname | La grande école de l'économie, de la statistique, de la finance et de l'assurance |
Website | www.ensae.fr (engl.) |
ENSAE Paris (officially École nationale de la statistique et de l'administration économique Paris) is a French grande école of engineering and a member of ParisTech (Paris Institute of Technology). ENSAE Paris is known as the branch school of École Polytechnique for statistics, data science and machine learning.
It is one of France's top schools of economics, statistics, data science and machine learning and is directly attached to France's Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques (INSEE) and the French Ministry of Economy and Finance.
Students are given a proficient training both in economics and statistics and they can specialize in macroeconomics, microeconomics, statistics or finance.
The ENSAE has the ability to train its students for the French actuary graduation (Institut des Actuaires).
History
The ENSAE was established in 1942 under the National Statistics Service (ancestor of the INSEE, National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies) under the name of the School of Applied Statistics. In 1946, the creation of INSEE, the school took the name of INSEE Specialization School. At this time, the school led to two types of administrative career: "administrateur" (the highest managing level of the INSEE administration) and "attaché" (a lower level) civil servant executives. Early promotions included five or six "administrateurs" students five or six "attachés" students.
The decree of 2 November 1960 changed the name of the school into the National School of Statistics and Economic Administration. The number of students grew, and the curriculum opened to graduate students from Law Schools and Universities of Economics. The decree of 15 April 1971 clarified the administrative status and the objective of the school in the academic field, definitely making the ENSAE a Grande Ecole.
In the 1980s, a system of scholarship was established to support doctoral studies. A research laboratory, the CREST (Center for Research in Economics and Statistics), was formed in 1988.
In 1994, the Department of training for "attachés", became a full-fledged school, the National School for Statistics and Analysis Areas information (ENSAI, relocated to Rennes). The "administrateurs" training stayed at the ENSAE where more and more students now choose to specialize in financial modeling and other new area of applied statistics such as biostatistics or marketing.
In 2006, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin announced officially the moving of the school to the new ParisTech Campus in Palaiseau, near the École Polytechnique in 2010.
In 2017, the school moved to its current campus in Palaiseau.
Mission
Included in the National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE) under the tutelage of Ministry of the Economy, Industry and Employment, ENSAE provides training for statisticians-economists, some of which are civil servants belonging to the Corps des Administrateurs de l'INSEE, a category of top level public managers in the French administration.
Economists and statisticians trained are intended to contribute to the economic research; former students hold positions within international organizations (UN, IMF, World Bank, European Commission,…) and French administration or other public institutions (Ministry of Economy, INSEE, CREST,…).
The school admits students from diverse backgrounds:
- Alumni of classes préparatoires (from scientific preparatory classes MP / MP *, but also business school preparatory classes ( "HEC math") and Humanities and Social Sciences preparatory classes (Khâgne BL)).
- Admission after a graduate degree (normaliens, polytechniciens students or other holders of Grandes écoles Master's degrees).
The institution is actually the only French Grande école to admit scientific, business and humanities students.
Since 2006 the school is accredited to deliver the title of "ingénieur" by the French Commission of Engineering Titles.
Curriculum
The specialization available during the last year.
- Actuarial Science
- Market Analysis & Corporate Finance
- Quantitative Finance
- Quantitative Methods & Social Sciences
- Forecasting & Economic Policy
- Statistics
- Data Science
Academic affiliations
The school has several partnerships and agreements with other academic institutions where students can complete their curriculum during their specialization year. A large and growing number of students chose to do such dual degree program in order to get an additional Master of Science, MBA or PhD degree from renowned institutions in the area of economics, finance, statistics and applied Mathematics where its cursus is one of the best: Harvard, Columbia, Humboldt University of Berlin, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, etc.
The ENSAE also has a partnership with Sciences Po Paris, allowing its students to pursue both curriculum at the same time and get an additional master's degree from Sciences Po. The agreement waives the students from passing the entry written examination.
ENSAE is member of ParisTech, the excellence engineering cluster gathering the best parisian Grandes Ecoles in each area of engineering: X, AgroParisTech, ENGREF, Ponts, ESPCI, Mines, ENSTA, ENSAM, Télécom Paris, Chimie ParisTech.
Jobs prospects
Former ENSAE graduates work mainly in Data Science and Machine learning, but also in finance, management, consulting, economic analysis and research (in economics and statistics).
About 10% of the recent alumni work in the public sector, the remaining works in capital markets (25%), insurance (25%), consulting (15%) or other industry sectors.
Around 30% of them get a first job outside France, in particular in London and New York. They are hired by tech firms, financial firms such as banks, insurers or hedge funds for their technical expertise in Data Science, Machine learning, finance, mathematics, economics and statistics.
2006 graduates positions are as follows:
- 53% work in Machine learning/Data Science (including research)
- 33% work in finance insurance:
- 21% work in financial engineering
- 7% are traders
- 11% are actuaries
- 3% are portfolio managers
- 24% are work in market survey and consulting:
- 10% economic analysis
- 4% consulting
- 1% audit
Since the ENSAE was founded, more than 5,000 statisticians economists, machine learning engineers, and data scientist have graduated.[2]
Remark
Note that the abbreviation ENSAE also refers to SUPAERO, a grande école for aerospace engineering in Toulouse, France (now ISAE). In order to mark the difference between the two schools, ENSAE is called "ENSAE Paris", in reference to the city where it is located.
Alumni
As a Grande Ecole, the ENSAE has a strong and organized alumni network. The "Association des Anciens de l'ENSAE" (ENSAE Alumni Association) manages the links between the different generations of graduates and help them at each stage of their career. The ENSAE Alumni Association is a member of ParisTech Alumni, manageurs.com and AAGEF. The current president of the association is Julien Guitard.
Here is a list of some of the most accomplished alumni. This illustrates perfectly the great diversity of positions held by its alumni both in the public and private sector.
- Philippe Brassac, CEO of Crédit Agricole S.A
- Benoît Coeuré, Member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, previously director of Agence France Trésor
- Frédéric Gagey, CFO of Air France-KLM
- Guy Abeille, economist.[3]
- Jacqueline Aglietta (1965), CEO of Médiamétrie
- Michel Aglietta (1964), economist
- Christian Gouriéroux, economist
- Patrick Artus (1975), economist, professor at École Polytechnique and chief economist at Natixis
- Alain Bensoussan (1965), member of the French Academy of Sciences, former chairman of European Space Agency (ESA) Council, former president of the CNES, former president of the INRIA
- François Bourguignon, former chief economist of the World Bank, president of the Paris Graduate School of Economics
- Philippe Bouyoux (1982), director of the economic policy, French Ministry of finance
- Jérôme Cazès (1977), CEO of Coface
- Eric Chaney (1988), chief economist (AXA)
- Paul Champsaur (1968), president of the French telecommunication regulation agency ARCEP
- Jean-Michel Charpin (1973), economist, previously director of the French National Institute of Economy l'INSEE
- Alain Desrosières (1965), sociologist
- Bruno Durieux (1969), former Minister
- Pierre-Henri Flamand (1995), global head of Goldman Sachs Principal Strategies
- Philippe Khuong-Huu (1988), co-founder of Alphadyne Asset Management
- Henri Gagnaire (1987), chairman, SVP
- Franck Goddio, underwater archaeologist
- Michel Haski (1970), CEO of AGF Asset Management
- Philippe Herzog (1964), former European Deputy
- Jean-Jacques Laffont (1970), economist
- Fabien Lévy, composer, former professor of composition at Columbia University, professor at the University of Music and Theater Leipzig*
- Antoine Paille (1977), founder of the Equity Derivatives Department of Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking in 1980' see article here
- Edmond Malinvaud (1948), economist
- Jean-Louis Mathias (1973), EDF
- Gilles Michel (1979), chairman and chief executive officer of Imerys, former managing director of Citroën (PSA Peugeot Citroën) and managing director of the Fonds stratégique d'investissement (FSI)
- Jean-Claude Milleron (1963), economist
- Hamza Ben Driss Ottmani (1973), Moroccan economist and writer
- Pierre-Michel Passy, president of Edmond de Rothschild Investment Partners
- Patrick Rey, professor at the IDEI and at the École Polytechnique
- Bernard Salanié (1986), economist, professor at the École Polytechnique and at Columbia University
- Christian Sautter (1965), former French Minister of Finances
- Claude Thélot (1970), former president of the Commission du débat national sur l'avenir de l'École
- Michel Volle (1965), economist
References
- ^ Key figures (2015)
- ^ First job in 2006 Archived 7 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ 3% de déficit : "Le chiffre est né sur un coin de table", Le Parisien, September 28, 2012
External links
- ENSAE website—(in French)
- ENSAE Alumni—(in French)