Jing Zhang
University of Michigan
Jing Zhang is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Michigan. She received her PhD from the University of Minnesota in 2005. Her research focuses on impacts of international financial frictions on international capital flows, international risk sharing and sovereign defaults, impacts of trade on structural change, and the evolution of comparative advantage. Other research interests include adverse selection in labor markets, household portfolio rebalancing in the general equilibrium, Korean firm performance during 1997 financial crisis, and firm financing and dynamics across countries with different degrees of financial development.
Articles by Jing Zhang:
-
Is China’s growth bad news for western countries?
2 April 2012, 11194 reads
Don't Miss
Rethinking macroeconomic policy
Blanchard
Fiscal consolidation: At what speed?
Blanchard, Leigh
Is inflation targeting dead? Central Banking After the Crisis
Reichlin, Baldwin
Most Read
- Distilling the macroeconomic news flowBeber, Brandt, Luisi
- 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
- 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
