Jeffrey Frankel
Harvard Kennedy School
Jeffrey Frankel is Harpel Professor at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. He directs the program in International Finance and Macroeconomics at the National Bureau of Economic Research, where he is also on the Business Cycle Dating Committee, which officially declares U.S. recessions. Professor Frankel served at the Council of Economic Advisers in 1983-84 and 1996-99; he was appointed by Bill Clinton as CEA Member with responsibility for macroeconomics, international economics, and the environment. Before moving east, he had been professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, having joined the faculty in 1979. He is on advisory panels for the Federal Reserve Banks of New York and Boston, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, and the Peterson Institute for International Economics. In the past he has visited the IIE, the IMF, and the Federal Reserve Board. His research interests include currencies, crises, commodities, international finance, monetary and fiscal policy, trade, and global environmental issues. He was born in San Francisco, graduated from Swarthmore College, and received his Economics PhD from MIT.
Articles by Jeffrey Frankel:
-
Monetary alchemy, fiscal science
29 January 2013, 11542 reads
-
Central banks can phase in nominal GDP targets without damaging the inflation anchor
19 December 2012, 7940 reads
-
Which of the 50 states practise personal responsibility?
2 October 2012, 29210 reads
-
The Procyclicalists: Fiscal austerity vs. stimulus
7 August 2012, 25208 reads
-
Could Eurobonds be the answer to the Eurozone crisis?
27 June 2012, 14181 reads
-
Inflation targeting is dead: Long live nominal GDP targeting
19 June 2012, 17678 reads
-
How to agree on emissions targets and a successor to Kyoto
28 November 2011, 6590 reads
-
The rise of the renminbi as international currency: Historical precedents
10 October 2011, 14539 reads
-
How developing nations escaped procyclical fiscal policy
23 June 2011, 14008 reads
-
The Greek debt crisis: The ECB’s three big mistakes
16 May 2011, 14124 reads
-
What nominal anchor should commodity exporters’ monetary policies target?
2 October 2010, 7687 reads
-
Early warning indicators and the 2008-09 crisis: New evidence
1 July 2010, 21765 reads
-
A win-win proposal: Let the renminbi appreciate
16 April 2010, 8280 reads
-
Designing a politically feasible multilateral climate change agreement
18 July 2009, 10403 reads
-
The Euro at ten: Why such small trade effects?
24 December 2008, 42699 reads
-
The emerging consensus against the Paulson Plan
23 September 2008, 11623 reads
-
Time to lose the dollar peg: Gulf States
9 July 2008, 31357 reads
-
Monetary policy and commodity prices
29 May 2008, 35767 reads
-
An Explanation for Soaring Commodity Prices
25 March 2008, 53350 reads
-
The euro could surpass the dollar within ten years
18 March 2008, 94261 reads
-
Kyoto’s replacement: targets in a framework
25 June 2007, 30189 reads
Don't Miss
The wisdom of Karlsruhe: The OMT court case should be dismissed
Giavazzi, Portes, Weder di Mauro, Wyplosz
Most Read
- The case for 4% inflationBall
- The banking crisis as a giant carry trade gone wrongAcharya, Steffen
- Everything the IMF wanted to know about financial regulation and wasn’t afraid to askBair
- Rethinking macroeconomic policy: Getting granularBlanchard, Dell'Ariccia, Mauro
- Iceland’s post-Crisis economy: A myth or a miracle?Danielsson
- 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
- Panic-driven austerity in the Eurozone and its implicationsDe Grauwe, Ji
- Debt, deleveraging, and the liquidity trap: A new modelKrugman
