Anne Sibert
Birkbeck, University of London and CEPR
Anne Sibert is a Professor of Economics at Birkbeck, University of London. She is a Research Fellow of CEPR and a Fellow of the European Economic Association and the Kiel Institute for World Economics. Her main research interests are central bank design, intertemporal open economy public finance, economic and political aspects of economic and monetary union in Europe and the political economy of structural reform. She serves on the Panel of Economic and Monetary Experts for the European Parliament’s Committee for Economic and Monetary Affairs. She was an external member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Central Bank of Iceland and was a member of the Council of Economic Advisors to the Opposition Front Bench, UK. She has served on the editorial boards of several journals and was Associate Editor of the Economic Journal and Macroeconomic Dynamics. She earned her PhD in economics at Carnegie-Mellon University.
Articles by Anne Sibert:
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Deposit insurance after Iceland and Cyprus
2 April 2013, 13030 reads
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The damaged ECB legitimacy
15 September 2011, 11484 reads
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Love letters from Iceland: Accountability of the Eurosystem
18 May 2010, 21422 reads
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The Icesave dispute
13 February 2010, 12674 reads
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Designing a systemic risk warning system
16 January 2010, 12112 reads
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Could Greenland be the new Iceland?
10 August 2009, 39020 reads
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Why did the bankers behave so badly?
18 May 2009, 45455 reads
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Iceland’s banking collapse: Predicable end and lessons for other vulnerable nations
30 October 2008, 80519 reads
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The dangerous protectionism of Barack Obama
26 February 2008, 57283 reads
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Subprime crisis unfolds: What the Fed should have done instead
18 August 2007, 17985 reads
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Subprime 'crisis': What Central Bankers should do and why
13 August 2007, 49236 reads
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The euro’s inflation test
3 May 2006, 38136 reads
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Helicopter money as a policy option
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