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How well have we solved the problem of too-big-to-fail? John Vickers examined banking reform initiatives five years after the crisis, with a focus on Britain and the rest of Europe.
Through the Haze: 3 Economists Look at the Next Five Years
Justin Yifu Lin
Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, World Bank
John B. Taylor
Professor of Economics, Stanford University, and Former Undersecretary of the Treasury
Laurence H. Meyer
Senior Managing Director and Co-Founder, Macroeconomic Advisers
Moderator: Kelly Evans, Assistant News Editor, The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal CFO Network in Washington DC on June 21, 2011. Photo by Paul Morse
In April 2015, economists and researchers gathered at the Chicago Trade Conference to discuss the analysis of the flows of goods (firm-to-firm trade and global sourcing) and the analysis of the flows of technologies between countries.
Workshops on Learning in Macroeconomics and Finance, Macro and Micro Perspectives on Taxation, Time Series Analysis in Macro and Finance, and Understanding Civil Conflict.
About the Barcelona GSE Summer Forum: j.mp/SummerForumBarcelonaGSE
Roundtable Discussion (From left to right: Ramon Fernandez, Director General of the Treasury, Ministry for the Economy, Finance and Trade France, Felipe Larraín Bascuñán, Minister of Finance Chile, Angel Gurría, OECD Secretary-General, Juan Carlos Echeverry, Minister of Finance and Public Credit Colombia, Luis Alberto Monaco, IDB President, José Antonio González Anaya, Under-Secretary of Revenues Ministry of Public Finance and Credit Mexico, Mike Reid, The Economist) - IV International Forum on Latin America and the Caribbean, Paris 25 May 2012
Widener Law presents talk on
“Improving Financial Stability”
The dubious state of the American economy provides the backdrop for an upcoming special lecture at Widener Law that is free and open to the public.
“Improving Financial Stability” is the title of the talk to be presented by William Poole, distinguished scholar in residence at the Alfred Lerner College of Business & Economics at the University of Delaware. Poole will visit the Delaware campus on Thursday, Oct. 8 at 5 p.m. His hour-long lecture will be held in the Ruby R. Vale Moot Courtroom.
In the first half of the program, Poole is expected to discuss his thoughts on the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve System – the central banking system for the United States – and how he believes both lack a vision for the future at a time when one is desperately needed. He will also share his views on what that vision ought to be. The remainder of the program will be open for audience questions and discussion.
Poole holds an undergraduate degree from Swarthmore College, and an MBA and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. His teaching interests lie in macroeconomics and monetary economics. He joined the University of Delaware faculty in fall 2008.
The lecture is presented by Widener Law and its Institute of Delaware Corporate and Business Law.
Mr. Tapera Muzira, co-ordinator, Jobs for youth in Africa Strategy, African development bank; Adam Elhiraika, Director, Macroeconomics and Governance Division, United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA); Professor Haroon Bhorat, Professor of Economics and Director of the Development Policy Research Unit, University of Cape Town; Dr. Tarek Galal Shawki, Minister of Education; Hanan Morsy, Director of Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting and Research Department of African Development Bank (AfDB); Raymond Gilpin, Chief Economist, and Head, Strategy, Research and Analysis, United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and Juliana Ratovoson, Interim President, Pan African of Youth Union having a group portrait during African Economic Conference (AEC) 2019 - Plenary session 1 - High - Level Panel on Youth Employment, Skills, and Entrepreneurship for Africa's Development (AFDB, ECA, and UNDP) on December 02, 2019, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.
Prof. Massimo Motta, Dean of the Barcelona GSE, welcomes the 2010-11 master students and offers some hints for a successful year.
Hilde C. Bjørnland, Professor of Economics at the Norwegian School of Management and scientific advisor to the Norges Bank, poses at the University of California, Berkeley, on April 30, 2009.
The CITE conference is designed specifically to encourage sharing of new ideas and early-stage models of financial markets with macroeconomic linkages, particularly by young economists.
Workshops on Learning in Macroeconomics and Finance, Macro and Micro Perspectives on Taxation, Time Series Analysis in Macro and Finance, and Understanding Civil Conflict.
About the Barcelona GSE Summer Forum: j.mp/SummerForumBarcelonaGSE
Workshops on Learning in Macroeconomics and Finance, Macro and Micro Perspectives on Taxation, Time Series Analysis in Macro and Finance, and Understanding Civil Conflict.
About the Barcelona GSE Summer Forum: j.mp/SummerForumBarcelonaGSE
Through the Haze: 3 Economists Look at the Next Five Years
Justin Yifu Lin
Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, World Bank
John B. Taylor
Professor of Economics, Stanford University, and Former Undersecretary of the Treasury
Laurence H. Meyer
Senior Managing Director and Co-Founder, Macroeconomic Advisers
Moderator: Kelly Evans, Assistant News Editor, The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal CFO Network in Washington DC on June 21, 2011. Photo by Paul Morse
Tatiana Valovaya, Minister for Integration and Macroeconomics, Eurasian
Economic Commission, Moscow at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Tianjin, People's Republic of China 2016. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Faruk Pinjo
How well have we solved the problem of too-big-to-fail? John Vickers examined banking reform initiatives five years after the crisis, with a focus on Britain and the rest of Europe.
The CITE conference is designed specifically to encourage sharing of new ideas and early-stage models of financial markets with macroeconomic linkages, particularly by young economists.
2022-09-12: Dr. Hanan Morsy, Director, Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting and Research Department, African Development Bank sharing a space with (L-R), Ms. Ahunna Eziakonwa, Assistant Secretary-General and Director of UNDP's Regional Bureau for Africa; Ms. Amanda Serumaga, UNDP Resident Representative for Mauritius and Seychelles; Mr. Gerard Pascal Bussier, Deputy Financial Secretary at the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development of the Government of Mauritius during the AEC- Opening Ceremony.
Through the Haze: 3 Economists Look at the Next Five Years
Justin Yifu Lin
Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, World Bank
John B. Taylor
Professor of Economics, Stanford University, and Former Undersecretary of the Treasury
Laurence H. Meyer
Senior Managing Director and Co-Founder, Macroeconomic Advisers
Moderator: Kelly Evans, Assistant News Editor, The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal CFO Network in Washington DC on June 21, 2011. Photo by Paul Morse
Hilde C. Bjørnland, Professor of Economics at the Norwegian School of Management and scientific advisor to the Norges Bank, poses at the University of California, Berkeley, on April 30, 2009.
The IGM Annual Conference 2021, held on 24 November 2021 in a hybrid mode in Maputo, Mozambique, gathered local and international academics and development practitioners to present and discuss recent research on the socio-economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in Mozambique and their policy implications.
The conference was structured around three thematic sessions with topics ranging from macroeconomic and labour market impacts of COVID-19 to the impact of the pandemic on the economic development in urban areas of the country. The event culminates with a panel discussion on the policy implications of the research presented.
Portrait of Dr. Hanan Morsy, Director, Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting and Research Department, African Development Bank while addressing during Annual Meeting 2019 - Day 1 - Special Event Luncheon African Economic Outlook at Sala Banquet Sipopo Conference Center Annex Building on June 11, 2019, in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea.
Organized as self-teaching guides, all Demystified titles come complete with key points, background information, end-of-chapter review questions, and even final exams.
Through the Haze: 3 Economists Look at the Next Five Years
Justin Yifu Lin
Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, World Bank
John B. Taylor
Professor of Economics, Stanford University, and Former Undersecretary of the Treasury
Laurence H. Meyer
Senior Managing Director and Co-Founder, Macroeconomic Advisers
Moderator: Kelly Evans, Assistant News Editor, The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal CFO Network in Washington DC on June 21, 2011. Photo by Paul Morse
Workshops on Learning in Macroeconomics and Finance, Macro and Micro Perspectives on Taxation, Time Series Analysis in Macro and Finance, and Understanding Civil Conflict.
About the Barcelona GSE Summer Forum: j.mp/SummerForumBarcelonaGSE
John Wiley & Sons Accounting Prize Awarded to the student with the best result in the course Macroeconomics
1 May 2019. Panelists present the AREO 2019, a flagship report produced by the ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO), which discusses the regional economic prospects as well as a thematic study on “Building Capacity and Connectivity for the New Economy.”
The event was held during the 52nd Annual Meeting of the ADB Board of Governors.
Learn more about the event.
Through the Haze: 3 Economists Look at the Next Five Years
Justin Yifu Lin
Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, World Bank
John B. Taylor
Professor of Economics, Stanford University, and Former Undersecretary of the Treasury
Laurence H. Meyer
Senior Managing Director and Co-Founder, Macroeconomic Advisers
Moderator: Kelly Evans, Assistant News Editor, The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal CFO Network in Washington DC on June 21, 2011. Photo by Paul Morse
Ten years after the 2008 economic recession, the government is ill-prepared to defend itself against the next economic downturn. Interest rates remain low, partisanship remains intractable, and the federal debt is rising at an unprecedented rate. These factors will hamstring traditional monetary and fiscal stimulus.
In his new book, “Law and Macroeconomics,” Yale Law Professor Yair Listokin argues that we can respond more quickly to the next economic crisis by deploying a policy approach whose proven success is too rarely acknowledged: regulation. He proposes that we take seriously the idea that law can function as a macroeconomic tool, capable of stimulating demand when needed and relieving demand when it threatens to overheat economies. And though history has demonstrated that law is an unwieldy instrument of macroeconomic policy, Listokin argues that under certain conditions it offers a vital alternative to the monetary and fiscal policy tools.
On Tuesday, September 10, at an Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center event, Listokin presented the key findings of his research, and panelists deepened the discussion by addressing the following questions:
What role does the law play in stimulating aggregate demand?
How can laws and regulations complement traditional fiscal and monetary policy approaches to stabilizing the business cycle?
Can regulations act as an effective alternative to fiscal and monetary policy during economic downturn?
Which regulations should lawmakers implement to combat economic shocks?
Photo Credit : Chris Williams
Suraj Malladi received the Award for Academic Achievement in Macroeconomics. A double major in mathematics and economics, Malladi excelled in both fields and also pursued advanced graduate course work. Originally from Fairfax, Virginia, he plans to work in finance and hopes to pursue graduate studies in the future.
The 2016 MFM Summer Session held June 11–15 gave doctoral students and other early career researchers a thorough grounding in in macroeconomic modeling. Students learned techniques, data sources, evidence, applications, and methods to assess how the financial sector impacts the economy as a whole. The program brought together leading academics and experts who build and use models to manage system risk in financial and policy settings. Speakers presented models and methods in contexts focused on understanding the last financial crisis—and preventing the next one.
Turkey’s economic and social performance since 2000 has been impressive. However, more recently the country has faced a number of internal and external challenges, notably macroeconomic imbalances, geopolitical uncertainties, changing patterns of global capital and trade flows, and the effects of climate change.
These challenges have tested investor confidence and by the summer of 2018 there has been a significant depreciation of the Turkish lira.
After the formation of the new Government, the authorities responded with appropriate coordinated policy action. Monetary policy was tightened substantially and the New Economic Programme was introduced. This resulted in macroeconomic stabilisation, but at the cost of a sharp slowdown in economic activity.
Meanwhile, the private sector in Turkey is deleveraging. Credit growth, which had been an important catalyst for economic growth in the past, is unlikely to pick up quickly. In the EBRD’s view, the outlook for the medium term is for growth to be below trend.
After local elections in March 2018, the authorities have a four-year window with no scheduled polls on the horizon. They are now considering a range of structural reforms to ensure a more sustainable medium and long-term growth path for the economy. This year’s Investment Outlook Session explored this question from the perspective of a top-level Turkish policymaker.
Moderator
Arvid Tuerkner
Managing Director, Turkey, EBRD - Istanbul
Speakers
Berat Albayrak
Minister, Mini
Ten years after the 2008 economic recession, the government is ill-prepared to defend itself against the next economic downturn. Interest rates remain low, partisanship remains intractable, and the federal debt is rising at an unprecedented rate. These factors will hamstring traditional monetary and fiscal stimulus.
In his new book, “Law and Macroeconomics,” Yale Law Professor Yair Listokin argues that we can respond more quickly to the next economic crisis by deploying a policy approach whose proven success is too rarely acknowledged: regulation. He proposes that we take seriously the idea that law can function as a macroeconomic tool, capable of stimulating demand when needed and relieving demand when it threatens to overheat economies. And though history has demonstrated that law is an unwieldy instrument of macroeconomic policy, Listokin argues that under certain conditions it offers a vital alternative to the monetary and fiscal policy tools.
On Tuesday, September 10, at an Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center event, Listokin presented the key findings of his research, and panelists deepened the discussion by addressing the following questions:
What role does the law play in stimulating aggregate demand?
How can laws and regulations complement traditional fiscal and monetary policy approaches to stabilizing the business cycle?
Can regulations act as an effective alternative to fiscal and monetary policy during economic downturn?
Which regulations should lawmakers implement to combat economic shocks?
Photo Credit : Chris Williams
This conference features recent research on the role of housing and household debt in macroeconomics. Topics include the effects of fiscal stimulus through the housing market on the economy, and how quantitative easing affects the economy through mortgage and housing markets.
To what extent can we prepare for the global shifts reshaping our world? How should we respond to digitalisation, urbanisation, resource scarcity and economic power shifts? Will futureproofing today make for a better tomorrow? The Megatrends session explored global macroeconomic and geostrategic forces that are shaping the region and our world in significant ways. It was recorded before a live audience who asked questions directly to the panelists, and was later transmitted for the EBRD podcast series. This panel aimed to expose the depth and complexity of these Megatrends which will require innovative and collaborative solutions at the local, national, regional and international levels. With the help of five well-known thought leaders, the session discussed the major trends, their drivers, opportunities and risks, as well as explored what actions might help to manage the waves of disruptive transitions.
Moderator
Jonathan Charles
Managing Director, Communications, EBRD
Speakers
Neil Buckley
Chief Leader Writer, Financial Times Ltd.
Sergei Guriev
Chief Economist, EBRD
Tim Judah
Reporter, The Economist / Fellow at IWM - Institute for Human Sciences
Alexia Latortue
Managing Director, Corporate Strategy, EBRD
Kerrie Law
Associate, Corporate Strategy, EBRD
Dr. Barassou Diawara, Knowledge Management Expert, and co-ordinator of Africa Think Tank Network, African Capacity Building Foundation shaking hands with Dr. Hanan Morsy, Director, Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting, and Research Department, African Development Bank in the presence of Mr. Eric Ogunleye, Advisor to the Chief Economist and Vice President, Economic Governance and Knowledge Management Complex, African Development Bank and Olashile Odetola during African Economic Conference (AEC) 2019 - Plenary Session 5 - The Future of Work for Youth Challenges, Opportunities, Policies on December 4, 2019, at Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.
ADBI held two seminars on microeconomics and macroeconomics for early-career researchers from the Asian region on 29-30 August 2013.
Read more: www.adbi.org/event/5601.adbi.young.researchers.micro.macr...
Through the Haze: 3 Economists Look at the Next Five Years..Justin Yifu Lin.Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, World Bank..John B. Taylor.Professor of Economics, Stanford University, and Former Undersecretary of the Treasury..Laurence H. Meyer.Senior Managing Director and Co-Founder, Macroeconomic Advisers..Moderator: Kelly Evans, Assistant News Editor, The Wall Street Journal..The Wall Street Journal CFO Network in Washington DC on June 21, 2011. Photo by Paul Morse
This conference features recent research on the role of housing and household debt in macroeconomics. Topics include the effects of fiscal stimulus through the housing market on the economy, and how quantitative easing affects the economy through mortgage and housing markets.
Chairperson of the Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC), Festus G. Mogae, expresses his disappointment at the meeting of JMEC held in South Sudan’s capital Juba on 2 February 2016. “I am slightly disappointed that another date has come and gone…This disappointment stems not solely because a day on a calendar was missed, but because the potential, the opportunity, the possibility of a new government is so close, so vital for this country, that it must be taken, he explained. “Africa has too many lost generations already,” he lamented. “Let us use the opportunity we have had ourselves.”
He point that, today the South Sudanese pound is close to 30 against the US dollar, and pleaded with the parties. “I plead with you to avoid ruin. form the transitional government of national unity without further delay, restore stability, and repair the damage that has been done before it is too late, so that urgent economic assistance can become available.”
He pointed out that sound macroeconomic management in itself will not address South Sudan’s humanitarian crisis. Mogae assured the meeting that he received information from the ceasefire monitoring teams, that people in Mundri are “starving to death” saying that there would be more displacements from Equatoria to neighbouring Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
This photo shows the launch of our study “Green Economy in a Blue World” at the Pacific Policy Dialogue in Fiji to help Pacific Island countries and development partners to respond to challenges, which include macroeconomic and energy security, and recent global financial, food and fuel crises.
For more information: www.unescap.org/news/pacific-needs-sound-policies-promote...
Tobias Adrian of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Nellie Lang of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors discuss policy tools with other attendees of at the Becker Friedman Institute conference "Macro Financial Modeling and Macroeconomic Fragility," held in Boston in October 2013.
- See more at: bfi.uchicago.edu/events/macro-financial-modeling-and-macr...
David Wessel the Economics Editor for the Wall Street Journal (L) speaks with International Monetary Fund's Economic Counsellor and Director Olivier Blanchard (R) prior to the luncheon at the Tenth Annual Jacques Polak Research Conference at the IMF headquarters November 5, 2009 in Washington, DC. The conference is intended to provide a forum for discussing innovative research in economics, undertaken both by IMF staff and by outside economists, and to facilitate the exchange of views among researchers and policy makers. The theme of this year's Annual Research Conference is "Financial Frictions and Macroeconomic Adjustment" and promises to be an exciting opportunity to discuss topical issues in light of the crisis. International Monetary Fund Photograph/Stephen Jaffe
02.02.02 Nicaragua.
Cacao drying and sorting for export
The Pacific Coast of Nicaragua was settled as a Spanish colony from Panama in the early 16th century. Independence from Spain was declared in 1821 and the country became an independent republic in 1838. Britain occupied the Caribbean Coast in the first half of the 19th century, but gradually ceded control of the region in subsequent decades. Violent opposition to governmental manipulation and corruption spread to all classes by 1978 and resulted in a short-lived civil war that brought the Marxist Sandinista guerrillas to power in 1979. Nicaraguan aid to leftist rebels in El Salvador caused the US to sponsor anti-Sandinista contra guerrillas through much of the 1980s. Free elections in 1990, 1996, and again in 2001 saw the Sandinistas defeated. The country has slowly rebuilt its economy during the 1990s, but was hard hit by Hurricane Mitch in 1998.
Nicaragua, one of the hemisphere's poorest countries, faces low per capita income, flagging socio-economic indicators, and huge external debt. Distribution of income is one of the most unequal on the globe. While the country has made progress toward macroeconomic stability over the past few years, a banking crisis and scandal has shaken the economy. Nicaragua will continue to be dependent on international aid and debt relief under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative. Donors have made aid conditional on the openness of government financial operation, poverty alleviation, and human rights. Nicaragua met the conditions for additional debt service relief in December 2000. Growth should move up moderately in 2003 because of increased private investment and exports.