Geoffrey R D Underhill
University of Amsterdam
http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/g.r.d.underhill/
Geoffrey R D Underhill is Professor of International Governance at the University of Amsterdam, a post he has held since 1998. He works on the political economy of governance in relation to international trade and the financial sector under conditions of cross-border market integration. He also has a long-running concern with theories of political economy, work which focuses on the relationship of patterns of market competition to shifting patterns of regulation and governance. His most recent work has focused on international co-operation for the regulation and supervision of global financial markets, the impact of regulatory change in financial markets on the global monetary system and the wider economic development process, and on problems of legitimacy and representation in global financial governance. He is author/editor of eleven books and over forty scholarly articles in peer-reviewed journals and edited collections. His most recent book, Global Financial Integration Thirty Years On: from Reform to Crisis (ed. with J. Blom and D. Mügge) was published by Cambridge University Press in 2010.
Articles by Geoffrey R D Underhill:
-
Democratic legitimacy of the Eurozone
19 March 2013, 5631 reads
-
The political economy of (eventual) banking union
16 October 2012, 3959 reads
-
Eurozone crisis: We knew all we needed to know…
23 December 2010, 26995 reads
Don't Miss
Helicopter money as a policy option
Reichlin, Turner, Woodford
Most Read
- Fiscal consolidation: At what speed?Blanchard, Leigh
- Public debt and economic growth, one more timePanizza, Presbitero
- Escaping liquidity traps: Lessons from the UK’s 1930s escapeCrafts
- The lessons of the North Atlantic crisis for economic theory and policyStiglitz
- Rethinking macroeconomic policyBlanchard
- A tale of two depressions: What do the new data tell us? February 2010 updateEichengreen, O’Rourke
- Educated in America: College graduates and high school dropoutsHeckman, LaFontaine
- Eurozone breakup would trigger the mother of all financial crisesEichengreen
- Debt, deleveraging, and the liquidity trap: A new modelKrugman
- Panic-driven austerity in the Eurozone and its implicationsDe Grauwe, Ji
