Carmen M Reinhart
Harvard University
Carmen M. Reinhart is the Minos A. Zombanakis Professor of the International Financial System at Harvard Kennedy School. Previously she was the Dennis Weatherstone Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and Professor of Economics and Director of the Center for International Economics at the University of Maryland. She received her Ph.D. from Columbia University. Professor Reinhart held positions as Chief Economist and Vice President at the investment bank Bear Stearns in the 1980s, where she became interested in financial crises, international contagion and commodity price cycles. Subsequently, she spent several years at the International Monetary Fund. She is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Reinhart has served on numerous editorial boards, panels, and has testified before congress. She has written and published on a variety of topics in macroeconomics and international finance and trade including: international capital flows, exchange rates, inflation and commodity prices, banking and sovereign debt crises, currency crashes, and contagion. Her papers have been published in leading scholarly journals.
Her work has helped to inform the understanding of financial crises for over a decade. Her best-selling book (with Kenneth S. Rogoff) entitled This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly (Princeton Press) documents the striking similarities of the recurring booms and busts that have characterised financial history and has been translated to 13 languages.
Articles by Carmen M Reinhart:
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This time is different, again? The US five years after the onset of subprime
22 October 2012, 30016 reads
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Financial repression: Then and now
26 March 2012, 18995 reads
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Capital inflows, exchange-rate flexibility, and credit booms
24 January 2012, 15475 reads
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Capital controls: A meta-analysis approach
24 March 2011, 16592 reads
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The eternal capital-inflow dilemma
25 February 2011, 10938 reads
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The decade after the fall: Diminished expectations, double dips, and external shocks
13 September 2010, 16245 reads
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Do countries “graduate” from crises? An historical perspective
31 August 2010, 13972 reads
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Debt and growth revisited
11 August 2010, 57031 reads
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Is the US too big to fail?
9 May 2010, 51315 reads
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Eight hundred years of financial folly
5 May 2010, 71669 reads
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From financial crash to debt crisis
9 April 2010, 11174 reads
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Fiscal stimulus for debt-intolerant countries
22 August 2009, 34034 reads
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The economic and fiscal consequences of financial crises
26 January 2009, 44297 reads
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From capital inflow bonanza to financial crash: Danger ahead for emerging markets
23 October 2008, 22712 reads
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‘This time is different’: eight hundred years of financial folly
25 July 2008, 14230 reads
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Vox's first book: The first global financial crisis of the 21st century
7 July 2008, 12216 reads
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The persistence of sovereign defaults
22 May 2008, 13835 reads
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Subprime crisis: causes, consequences and cures
15 March 2008, 96482 reads
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