VinUni Banner
Trinh Hong Hai

Trinh Hong Hai, PhD

College of Business and Management

Assistant Professor

Faculty of Finance

Biography

Hai Hong Trinh joins VinUniversity as a research-focused professor (Assistant Professor of Finance). He is an internationally recognized economist with a strong track record of publications in well-regarded journals. He has completed his master’s and doctoral studies at Massey University, New Zealand.

Dr. Hai is a referee for dozens of journals such as European Financial Management, Energy Economics, International Review of Economics and Finance, Financial Review, International Review of Financial Analysis, Review of World Economics, Economic Modelling, Applied Economics, Accounting and Finance, International Journal of Finance and Economics, and many other journals.

Regarding the 2019 ABDC list, Dr. Hai has been ranked #12 in New Zealand and #17 in Vietnam out of the most prolific national authors (his highest-ranking records). Over the years, he has acted as an executive board member of the British Accounting and Finance Association (BAFA-IPSIG, 2025 BAFA conference), the Sydney Banking and Finance Conference (SBFC), and a regular committee member of FMA International conferences. His research has been featured in Duke University’s Financial Economics Center (Fin Reg Blog). His research interests range from the microstructure of financial markets and institutions to macroeconomic phenomena toward inclusive growth and Sustainable Development Goals.

Financial Economics, Climate Finance, Climate Economics, Corporate Finance, Asset Pricing, ESG/CSR, International Macroeconomics, Environmental Finance, Energy Economics, Biodiversity Finance, Financial Intermediation, Uncertainty.

Financial Economics, Climate Finance, Climate Economics, Corporate Finance, Asset Pricing, ESG/CSR, International Macroeconomics, Environmental Finance, Energy Economics, Biodiversity Finance, Financial Intermediation, Uncertainty.

  • Trinh, H. H., Nguyen, C. P., Hao, W., & Wongchoti, U. (2021). Does stock liquidity affect bankruptcy risk? DID analysis from Vietnam. Pacific-Basin Finance Journal, 69, 101634.
  • Trinh, H. H., Sharma, G. D., Tiwari, A. K., & Vo, D. T. H. (2022). Examining the heterogeneity of financial development in the energy-environment nexus in the era of climate change: Novel evidence around the world. Energy Economics, 116, 106415.
  • Trinh, H. H., McCord, M., Lo, D., & Squires, G. (2023). Do green growth and technological innovation matter to infrastructure investments in the era of climate change? Global evidence. Applied Economics, 55(35), 4108-4129.
  • Trinh, H. H., Haouas, I., & Tran, T. T. T. (2024). Climate risks, sustainable finance, and green growth: The evolution of fintech. In Responsible Firms: CSR, ESG, and Global Sustainability (Vol. 23, pp. 147-160). Emerald Publishing Limited.
  • Trinh, H. H., & Tran, T. P. (2024). Global banking systems, financial stability, and uncertainty: How have countries coped with geopolitical risks?. International Review of Economics & Finance, 96, 103647.

PhD in Finance, Master of Finance, Massey University, New Zealand

Banner footer