Alberto Alesina
Harvard and CEPR
Alberto Alesina, born in Italy in 1957, is the Nathaniel Ropes Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University. He served as Chairman of the Department of Economics from 2003 - 2006. He obtained his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1986. He is also a member of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and the Center for Economic Policy Research. He is a member of the Econometric Society and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is a leader in the field of Political Economics and has published extensively in all major academic journals in economics. He has published five books and edited many more. His two most recent books are The Future of Europe: Reform or Decline published by MIT Press (2006), and Fighting Poverty in the US and Europe: A World of Difference, published by Oxford University Press. He has been a Co-editor of the Quarterly Journal of Economics for eight years and Associate Editor of many academic journals. He has published columns in many leading newspapers around the world and has visited several institutions including MIT, Tel Aviv University, University of Stockholm, The World Bank, and the IMF.
His work has covered a variety of topics: political business cycles, the political economy of fiscal policy and budget deficits, the process of European integration, stabilization policies in high inflation countries, the determination of the size of countries, currency unions, the political economic determinants of redistributive policies, differences in the welfare state in the US and Europe and, more generally, differences in the economic system in the US and Europe, the effect of alternative electoral systems on economic policies, and the determination of the choice of different electoral systems.
Articles by Alberto Alesina:
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Ethnic inequality
4 February 2013, 10179 reads
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Cut deficits by cutting spending
30 November 2012, 21775 reads
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A tale of two divergences
28 April 2012, 11682 reads
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The austerity question: ‘How’ is as important as ‘how much’
3 April 2012, 36094 reads
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Italy: An economy in denial
13 September 2011, 13118 reads
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Why a slowdown in Germany could be good for Europe
1 September 2011, 9220 reads
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Modern gender roles and ancient farming
2 July 2011, 13156 reads
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The death penalty and racial bias in the US
27 May 2011, 11254 reads
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Fiscal adjustments and the recession
12 November 2010, 11705 reads
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Germany spending is not the cure
17 June 2010, 13139 reads
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The electoral consequences of large fiscal adjustments
29 May 2010, 20685 reads
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The crisis, reduced inequality, and soak-the-rich populism
23 April 2009, 32845 reads
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Reform institutions; do not write new rules
13 November 2008, 36362 reads
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Calming the panic
9 October 2008, 11976 reads
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Open Letter to European leaders on Europe’s banking crisis: A call to action
1 October 2008, 79167 reads
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Do Italian credit markets discriminate against women?
30 September 2008, 10259 reads
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Ambiguity and extremism in elections
22 September 2008, 9818 reads
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How ethnic fragmentation undermines good governance
15 September 2008, 32390 reads
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Lisbon Treaty as Trojan horse
22 June 2008, 31402 reads
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Gender-based taxation: A response to critics
15 February 2008, 35885 reads
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Using tax policy to empower women
9 January 2008, 42148 reads
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Why the Left should learn to love liberalism
5 October 2007, 40557 reads
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Family matters: the evidence
17 June 2007, 33321 reads
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US-Europe income gap: Is it for real?
8 June 2007, 51412 reads
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Gender based tax (directors’ cut)
8 June 2007, 33855 reads
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Income tax gender discrimination
5 May 2007, 32755 reads
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