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i had some great pictures of igor accepting his award on the last night, but i lost them too.....

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.

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

The winter 2016 meeting was hosted by the Volatility Institute at New York University's Stern School of Business. This meeting featured sessions on the role of the housing market in the macroeconomy, the impact of big data and machine learning on macroeconomic research, and the potential of innovation contests to push macroeconomic modeling into new and exciting territory.

CSO delegates attend a seminar titled Macroeconomic Policy: What are the Global Trends during the IMF/Word Bank annual meeting in Washington, D.C. IMF Photo/Cliff Owen

OPENING KEYNOTE: A MACROECONOMIC VIEW OF INNOVATION IN ISRAEL delivered by Professor Daniel Tsiddon, Deputy CEO, Bank Leumi at the Israel Dealmakers Summit presented by Landmark Ventures on March 5, 2014 in New York.

OPENING KEYNOTE: A MACROECONOMIC VIEW OF INNOVATION IN ISRAEL delivered by Professor Daniel Tsiddon, Deputy CEO, Bank Leumi at the Israel Dealmakers Summit presented by Landmark Ventures on March 5, 2014 in New York.

2017-12-04: Vera Songwe, Executive Secretary, United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) addressing during the Opening Ceremony: 12th African Economic Conference. On stage (L-R) Jimmy Ocitti, Director, Public Information and Knowledge Management Division, ECA; Prof. Richard Joseph, John Evans Professor of International History and Politics at Northwestern University; Mr. Abebe Shimeles, Acting Director, Macroeconomics Policy, Forecasting And Research, African Development Bank; Dr. Celestin Monga, Chief Economist and Vice President, Economic Governance and Knowledge Management, African Development Bank.

2019-06-10: Dr. Hanan Morsy, Director, Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting and Research Department, African Development Bank speaking during the Launch of African Economic Outlook at the AU Summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

2016-03-18: Abebe Shimeles, Acting Director; Macroeconomics, Policy, Forecasting and Research delivering his speech during the14th ADF Replenishment.

Kabat meets with H.E. Tatyana D. Valovaya, Member of the Board - Minister in charge of Integration and Macroeconomics of the Eurasian Economic Commission

 

More information:

www.iiasa.ac.at/web/home/about/events/170315-Moscow.html

 

© IIASA

Policy makers and experts discussed key economic developments in Asia and the Pacific and ways to effectively manage them at ADBI in Tokyo on 13-14 February 2020. Read more: bit.ly/2P4AYAj

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FORTUNE Brainstorm Health 2023

Wednesday, April 26th, 2023

Los Angeles, CA, USA

 

1:00-2:20 PM

CONCURRENT LUNCHES

DRIVING HEALTH CARE INNOVATION IN A TUMULTUOUS ECONOMY

Hosted by Bristol Myers Squibb

Current macroeconomic trends and new laws around the world are shaking up the health care industry. Tightening budgets and legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act in the U.S. are causing many to rethink their priorities and what to invest in. Despite the challenges of this new era, founders and investors still see opportunities. We’ll hear from leaders working to navigate an uncertain economy and explore how they are activating innovation amid new patient expectations and growing technology disruption.

 

Cathi Ahearn, Senior Vice President, Worldwide Commercial Portfolio Strategy, Bristol Myers Squibb

Avanlee Christine, Founder and CEO, Avanlee Care

Frédérique Dame, Partner, Google Ventures

David Koretz, Co-founder and CEO, CopilotIQ

Moderator: Erika Fry, FORTUNE

 

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune

Session I: Overview of recent economic and social developments in Africa (agenda item 3) Presentation by Mr. Adam B. Elhiraika, Director of the Macroeconomic and Governance Division of ECA

Session I: Overview of recent economic and social developments in Africa (agenda item 3) Presentation by Mr. Adam B. Elhiraika, Director of the Macroeconomic and Governance Division of ECA

Session I: Overview of recent economic and social developments in Africa (agenda item 3) Presentation by Mr. Adam B. Elhiraika, Director of the Macroeconomic and Governance Division of ECA

Portrait of Dr. Hanan Morsy, Director, Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting and Research, AfDB during African Economic Conference (AEC) 2018 - Plenary session 2 - Infrastructure for Africa's Integration on December 3, 2018, at Kigali, Rwanda.

Mipim asia 2011 - conference - opening keynote - macroeconomic outlook and implications for asian real estate

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.

The Macro Financial Modeling Initiative hosted its second MFM Summer Session for Young Scholars on June 18-22, 2017 in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, at the site of the historic 1944 United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference. The session was designed for those interested in building macroeconomic models with enhanced linkages to the financial sector. It was open to doctoral students in economics and related fields as well as early-career professionals working in this area.

PHOTO BY ANEEL KARIM

 

Professor Robert Barro, whose lecture on “Macroeconomic Effects from Government Purchases and Taxes” was the highlight of the The University of the West Indies (UWI) Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social & Economic Studies (SALISES) 11th annual conference, which took place from March 24th to 26th, 2010.

 

The lecture took place on Wednesday 24th March at 6.30 p.m. in the Daaga Auditorium, UWI St. Augustine Campus.

 

Professor Robert Barro, Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics, Harvard University, is one of the most distinguished living economists. He has published many influential books and articles, including some of the most popular textbooks used by students of Economics.

 

The 2010 SALISES Conference, themed “Turmoil and turbulence in small developing states: Going beyond survival,” was officially opened at a formal ceremony on Wednesday 24th March, 2010 at 9.00 a.m. at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, Port of Spain.

 

For more information, please contact Francine Alleyne at Francine.Alleyne@sta.uwi.edu or (868) 662-2002 Ext. 2038/2391/2392.

 

For the latest UWI News, click sta.uwi.edu/news.

Dr. Hanan Morsy, Director, Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting, and Research Department, African Development Bank with Monique Ntumngia, Founder, Green Girls Organization, Cameroon and Anthony Nyong, Manager, Compliance and Safeguards Division, African Development Bank at the Presentation of African Economic Outlook Report 2020 on January 30, 2020, in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.

family enjoying the dinner: didn't want to be bothered with other economists...smart thinking!

Group portrait of 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 while addressing 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.

Michele Reilly is a scientist, an artist, and a systems thinker whose work resists easy classification. She trained in architecture and art at Cooper Union, where she began building intelligent machines and quickly became fascinated by the logic behind them. That curiosity drew her into mathematics, cryptography, macroeconomics, and eventually quantum physics. Her path has been shaped less by credentials than by the depth of her questions.

 

At MIT, where she teaches in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, Michele works at the intersection of computation and the structure of spacetime. She explores how information flows through the universe, drawing from Claude Shannon’s foundational theories and extending them into the quantum realm. Her research is ambitious, but it is rooted in careful thinking. She is not interested in speculation for its own sake. She wants to know what can be built, what can be measured, and what will last.

 

In 2016, she co-founded Turing, a quantum technology startup focused on building portable quantum memories and tools for long-distance quantum communication. She works closely with physicist Seth Lloyd on designing the scalable, robust systems needed to move quantum computing from theory into practice. The work is intricate and deliberate, building slowly toward a future that she sees as both beautiful and unfamiliar.

 

Michele is also a storyteller. Her science fiction series Steeplechase has received awards at Cannes and other international festivals. It reflects her belief that narrative and science are not separate pursuits, but parallel ways of exploring the unknown. In her teaching, she brings these strands together, guiding students through exercises that combine quantum theory, creative writing, and world-building. One of her courses, supported by MIT’s Center for Art, Science and Technology, invites students to imagine speculative futures grounded in scientific inquiry.

 

On her arm is a tattoo of Alan Turing. It is not ornamental. It is a quiet tribute to a thinker whose life and work continue to shape her own. Turing’s dedication to truth, structure, and the ethical weight of technology is a constant presence in her thinking. She carries it with her, quite literally.

 

The portrait above was made at The Interval at the Long Now Foundation in San Francisco. Michele is seated beside a polished table that reflects her image. Behind her stands the Orrery, a planetary model designed to keep time for ten thousand years. The setting reflects the spirit of her work. She is grounded in the present but always thinking forward, asking how we might live in ways that honor complexity, care, and continuity. She does not speak often about legacy. She speaks about attention, about precision, and about the discipline of staying with difficult questions until they begin to yield something real.

The Macro Financial Modeling Initiative hosted its second MFM Summer Session for Young Scholars on June 18-22, 2017 in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, at the site of the historic 1944 United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference. The session was designed for those interested in building macroeconomic models with enhanced linkages to the financial sector. It was open to doctoral students in economics and related fields as well as early-career professionals working in this area.

The 2017 OECD Economic Survey of China assesses the country’s recent macroeconomic performance and proposes policy measures to promote higher-quality growth. Improving corporate performance by boosting innovation activities and entrepreneurship, enhancing the standards of corporate governance and reforming state-owned enterprises by exposing them more to market mechanisms would raise efficiency and boost household incomes, increase employment opportunities and raise people’s overall well-being. Moving to less energy-intensive production is also key to achieve greener and more sustainable growth. Greater redistribution through the tax-and-transfer system and better targeting of social assistance would enhance inclusiveness. At the same time, inequalities in access to education, healthcare and pensions need to be addressed.

 

Find out more about the event iems.ust.hk/events/event/china-economic-prospects-oecd-an...

2019-01- 18: In a photograph (L-R) Dr. Hanan Morsy, Director, Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting and Research Department, African Development Bank; Mr. Charles O. Boamah, Senior Vice-President of the AfDB Group and Dr. Celestin Monga, Chief Economist and Vice President, Economic Governance and Knowledge Management, AfDB during the Launch of the African Economic Outlook. In frame, Dr. Victor Oladokun, Director, Communication & External Relations, African Development Bank.

The 2017 OECD Economic Survey of China assesses the country’s recent macroeconomic performance and proposes policy measures to promote higher-quality growth. Improving corporate performance by boosting innovation activities and entrepreneurship, enhancing the standards of corporate governance and reforming state-owned enterprises by exposing them more to market mechanisms would raise efficiency and boost household incomes, increase employment opportunities and raise people’s overall well-being. Moving to less energy-intensive production is also key to achieve greener and more sustainable growth. Greater redistribution through the tax-and-transfer system and better targeting of social assistance would enhance inclusiveness. At the same time, inequalities in access to education, healthcare and pensions need to be addressed.

 

Find out more about the event iems.ust.hk/events/event/china-economic-prospects-oecd-an...

OPENING KEYNOTE: A MACROECONOMIC VIEW OF INNOVATION IN ISRAEL delivered by Professor Daniel Tsiddon, Deputy CEO, Bank Leumi at the Israel Dealmakers Summit presented by Landmark Ventures on March 5, 2014 in New York.

Sanjay Pradhan, Chief Executive Officer, Open Government Partnership; Bartholomew Armah, Chief of Development Planning, Macroeconomics and Governance Division, United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA); Hanan Morsi, Director of the Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting and Research Department, African Development Bank; Kenneth Igbomor, Agri Economist & Markets Editor for West Africa, CNBC Africa; and Raymond Gilpin, Chief Economist and Head of Strategy, Regional Bureau for Africa, United Nations Development Program (UNDP) attending the Day-one of the African Economic Conference (AEC) 2020, Virtual Conference on December 8, 2020.

OPENING KEYNOTE: A MACROECONOMIC VIEW OF INNOVATION IN ISRAEL delivered by Professor Daniel Tsiddon, Deputy CEO, Bank Leumi at the Israel Dealmakers Summit presented by Landmark Ventures on March 5, 2014 in New York.

The Doctor of Business Administration in Finance Program presented “Financial Markets’ Volatility and Macroeconomic Uncertainty” on Friday, December 7, 2018, at Sacred Heart University’s West Campus. Guest speakers will include Bluford Putnam, Chief Economist and Managing Director at CME Group, Katina Stefanova, Founder and CEO of Marto Capital, and Victor de la Peña, Professor of Statistics, Columbia University. Photo by Mark F. Conrad

 

2023-02-18: Ms. Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, Hon.orable Minister of Finance, Budget & National Planning, African Development Bank Governor for Nigeria speaks during the 36th African Union Summit: 2023 Macroeconomic Report launch.

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.

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

029

FORTUNE Brainstorm Health 2023

Wednesday, April 26th, 2023

Los Angeles, CA, USA

 

1:00-2:20 PM

CONCURRENT LUNCHES

DRIVING HEALTH CARE INNOVATION IN A TUMULTUOUS ECONOMY

Hosted by Bristol Myers Squibb

Current macroeconomic trends and new laws around the world are shaking up the health care industry. Tightening budgets and legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act in the U.S. are causing many to rethink their priorities and what to invest in. Despite the challenges of this new era, founders and investors still see opportunities. We’ll hear from leaders working to navigate an uncertain economy and explore how they are activating innovation amid new patient expectations and growing technology disruption.

 

Cathi Ahearn, Senior Vice President, Worldwide Commercial Portfolio Strategy, Bristol Myers Squibb

Avanlee Christine, Founder and CEO, Avanlee Care

Frédérique Dame, Partner, Google Ventures

David Koretz, Co-founder and CEO, CopilotIQ

Moderator: Erika Fry, FORTUNE

 

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune

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