A glimpse into the future of the global economy
In this week’s episode of “A Glimpse into the Future," what the implications are for the global economy are of the backlash against globalization.
1994, MSc in Engineering Economic Systems, Stanford University; 1998, PhD in Economics, London School of Economics; 1998, PhD, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris. 1997-2000, Lecturer, London School of Economics and Political Science; 2000-06, Assistant Professor of Economics and International Affairs, Princeton University; 2006-07, Professor of Economics and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School and Bendheim Center for Finance. Since 2007, Professor of Economics, London Business School. 2010, Member of the Board, Autorité de Contrôle Prudentiel, the French regulatory authority for banks and insurance companies. Member, Commission Economique de la Nation. Recipient of awards: Alfred P Sloan Research Fellow (2005-07); Bernácer Prize, for best European economist working in macroeconomics under age 40 (2006); Fellow, British Academy (2011); Birgit Grodal Prize (2012); Yrjo Jannhsson Prize (2013), OBE for services to economics.
In this week’s episode of “A Glimpse into the Future," what the implications are for the global economy are of the backlash against globalization.
A recent conference hosted by the New York Federal Reserve looked at whether the US and Eurozone economies will take a convergent or a divergent path.
A report outlines a proposal for one measure to help deal with the refugee crisis – EU refugee bonds.
It is all too clear that if big, courageous actions are not now forthcoming at the European level, if we do not show solidarity, terrorists will insidiously destabilize our societies by p...