Curriculum Vitae
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The Workshop on Digital Currency Economics and Policy Is Jointly Organised by the Asian Bureau of Finance and Economic Resea
“The Workshop on Digital Currency Economics and Policy is jointly organised by the Asian Bureau of Finance and Economic Research (ABFER), the National University of Singapore (NUS) Business School and MAS. This Workshop, to be held in conjunction with the Singapore FinTech Festival 2018, aims to focus applied economic and financial research efforts on the implications of digital currencies for monetary policy and the financial system. It seeks to provide a platform for established academics in their mainstream areas of monetary and financial economics to apply their expertise to analysing the implications of digital currencies, and to encourage discussions on how the existing frameworks and paradigms of thinking about monetary and financial policies can be extended to incorporate this new technology-enabled development.” Competition amongst monies has a long history. Private or foreign money, if trusted, can serve as a medium of exchange, store of value and unit of account, alongside or even displacing, government-issued monies. Recent technological advancement has lowered the barriers to entry for users to create private digital instruments that behave like currencies, often without any issuer. Many of these have market prices (which reflect the value that holders assign to them) and are accepted by some merchants as payment for goods and services. Correspondingly, multiple private monies, called digital currencies, have emerged. While their economic significance is still debatable, the phenomenon raises many important monetary policy and regulatory issues. Digital monies can impact an economy, affect transaction arrangements and efficiency, and disrupt financial intermediation and related business models – especially in banking. They may modulate the relationship between traditional fiat money and price, savings and investment behaviour, and also expand avenues for illegal transactions. -
Sheridan Titman, Ph.D
SHERIDAN TITMAN, PH.D. CURRENT POSITION University of Texas at Austin, Texas McAllister Centennial Chair in Financial Services (1997 - present) Energy Management and Innovation Center, University of Texas McCombs School of Business Executive Director (2009 - present) PAST POSITIONS Boston College, Massachusetts Collins Professor of Finance (1994 - 1997) Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Professor, School of Business and Management (1992 - 1994) Served as vice chairman of the faculty and chairman of the appointments and tenure committees University of California at Los Angeles Professor (1989 - 1994) Vice Chairman, Anderson Graduate School of Business (1990 - 1992) Associate Professor and Finance Department Chairman (1986 - 1988) Assistant Professor (1980 - 1986) Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, Washington, D.C. Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Fall 1988 - Summer 1989) University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada Visiting Scholar (Summers of 1987, 1990 and 1993) EDUCATION AND PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATION Ph.D., Economics, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1981 M.S., Economics, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1978 B.S., Management Science, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1975 AWARDS AND HONORS GSAM Prize for best paper in the Review of Finance (2008) Smith Breeden Prize for best paper in the Journal of Finance (1997) Research Associate, NBER (1995 - ) RERI Research Grant (1995, 2001, 2002) Batterymarch Fellowship (1985) Third Prize, Q-Group Competition (1985) Research Grant, Institute for Quantitative Research in Finance (1983) Finalist, Berkeley Doctoral Prize Competition (1980) Social Science Research Council Fellowship (1979) William Larimer Mellon Fellowship (1976 - 1980) ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS “An International Comparison of Capital Structure and Debt Maturity Choices,” (with Joseph Fan and Garry Twite), Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, forthcoming. -
Christopher Polk
Christopher Polk Department of Finance London School of Economics London WC2A 2AE United Kingdom +44 (0)20 7849 4917 phone +44 (0)20 7852 3580 fax [email protected] http://personal.lse.ac.uk/polk CURRENT POSITION London School of Economics: Professor of Finance, 2006-present Center for Economic and Policy Research: Research Fellow, 2009-present PREVIOUS ACADEMIC POSITIONS Head of Department, September 2017-August 2020 Journal of Finance Associate Editor, July 2012-August 2018 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Visiting Professor of Finance, 2015-2016 Financial Markets Group (LSE Research Centre): Director, 2009-2015 Harvard University, Visiting Professor of Economics, 2008-2009 Kellogg School of Management: Assistant Professor of Finance, 1998-2006 EDUCATION Ph.D. in Finance, University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, 1998. Advisors: Eugene Fama (chair), John Cochrane, George Constantinides, Owen Lamont. B.S., Duke University, magna cum laude in physics and economics (with honors), 1990. HONORS AND FELLOWSHIPS Fama-DFA Prize: Best asset pricing paper in the Journal of Financial Economics, 2018 AQR Insight Award, Honorable Mention, 2014 IdR QUANTVALLEY /FdR Quantitative Management Initiative Research Award 2013 Europlace Institute of Finance Research Grant 2013 Q Group Research Award, 2012 Inquire Europe Research Award, 2012 Jensen Prize: Best corporate finance paper in the Journal of Financial Economics, 2002 Investment Analysts Society of Chicago Research Grant Award, 2002 Searle Fund Research Grant, 2002 Dean Jacobs Junior -
ANDREI SHLEIFER 1 March 2019
ANDREI SHLEIFER 1 March 2019 ANDREI SHLEIFER Department of Economics Harvard University M9 Littauer Center Cambridge, MA 02138 Date of Birth: February 20, 1961 Citizenship: U.S.A. Undergraduate Studies: Harvard, A.B., Math, 1982. Graduate Studies: MIT, Ph.D., May, 1986. Thesis Title: “The Business Cycle and the Stock Market” EMPLOYMENT: John L. Loeb Professor of Economics, Harvard University, 1991 - present. Professor of Finance and Business Economics, Graduate School of Business, The University of Chicago, 1989 - 1990. Assistant Professor of Finance and Business Economics, Graduate School of Business, The University of Chicago, 1987 - 1989. Assistant Professor of Economics, Princeton University, 1986 - 1987. OTHER AFFILIATIONS: Faculty Research Fellow and Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1986- Associate and Advisory Editor, Journal of Financial Economics, 1988 - . Associate Editor, Journal of Finance, 1988 - 1991. Editor, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1989 - 1999, 2012 - Advisor, Government of Russia, 1991 - 1997. Principal, LSV Asset Management, 1994 - 2003. Editor, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2003 - 2008. ANDREI SHLEIFER 2 March 2019 AWARDS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND GRANTS: National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, 1983 - 1986. CRSP Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Graduate School of Business, The University of Chicago, March-June, 1986. Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, 1990. National Science Foundation Grants, 1988 - 1989, 1990 - 1991, 19 94 - 1996, 1998 - 2000, 2001 - 2003. Presidential Young Investigator Award, 1989 - 1994. Bradley Foundation Grant, 1989, 1990, 1991 - 1992. Russell Sage Foundation Grant (with R. Vishny), 1988, 1991. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Grant (with L. Summers), 1986, 1988 - 1990. Fellow, Econometric Society, 1993. Roger F. Murray Award of the Q-Group, 1994, and the Smith-Breeden Prize of the Journal of Finance for Distinguished paper, 1995, given to “Contrarian Investment, Extrapolation, and Risk.” Member, U.S.-Israel Joint Economic Development Group, 1995 - 1997. -
JEFFREY WURGLER NYU Stern School of Business 44 West 4Th Street, Suite 9-190 New York, NY 10012-1126 Telephone: (212) 998-0367
JEFFREY WURGLER NYU Stern School of Business Telephone: (212) 998-0367 44 West 4th Street, Suite 9-190 Fax: (212) 995-4233 New York, NY 10012-1126 Email: [email protected] EMPLOYMENT New York University, Stern School of Business Nomura Professor of Finance, 2009 – Research Professor of Finance, 2007 – 2009 Associate Professor of Finance, 2005 – 2006 Charles Schaefer Family Fellow, 2003 – 2006 Assistant Professor of Finance, 2001 – 2005 University of Oxford, Said Business School Fellow, 2001 – 2002 Yale University, School of Management Robert and Candice Haas Assistant Professor of Corporate Finance, 2000 – 2001 Assistant Professor of Finance, 1999 – 2000 EDUCATION Harvard University Ph.D., M.A. Business Economics, 1999 Stanford University B.A.S. (honors) Economics, Mathematical and Computational Sciences, 1994 RESEARCH AND TEACHING INTERESTS Corporate Finance, Asset Pricing, Behavioral Finance OTHER ACADEMIC AND SERVICE ACTIVITIES Academic Director, NYU Stern-Shanghai M.S. Degree in Quantitative Finance, 2016 – Director, American Finance Association, 2014 – 2017 Editorial Committee Ethics Committee (co-drafter, Code of Ethics); ongoing member Investments Committee NYU Stern Senior Faculty Peer Review Committee, 2014 – 2016, 2017 – 2018 Senior Academic Fellow, Asian Bureau of Financial and Economic Research, 2012 – 2018 Associate Editor, Critical Finance Review, 2012 – Associate Editor, Journal of Financial Economics, 2011 – Associate Editor, Review of Asset Pricing Studies, 2011 – 2013, 2013 – 2016 Special Issue Editor, Journal of -
JEFFREY WURGLER NYU Stern School of Business 44 West 4Th Street, Suite 9-190 New York, NY 10012-1126 Telephone: (212) 998-0367
JEFFREY WURGLER NYU Stern School of Business Telephone: (212) 998-0367 44 West 4th Street, Suite 9-190 Fax: (212) 995-4233 New York, NY 10012-1126 Email: [email protected] EMPLOYMENT New York University, Stern School of Business Nomura Professor of Finance, 2009 – Research Professor of Finance, 2007 – 2009 Associate Professor of Finance, 2005 – 2006 Charles Schaefer Family Fellow, 2003 – 2006 Assistant Professor of Finance, 2001 – 2005 University of Oxford, Said Business School Fellow, 2001 – 2002 Yale University, School of Management Robert and Candice Haas Assistant Professor of Corporate Finance, 2000 – 2001 Assistant Professor of Finance, 1999 – 2000 EDUCATION Harvard University Ph.D., M.A. Business Economics, 1999 Stanford University B.A.S. (honors) Economics, Mathematical and Computational Sciences, 1994 RESEARCH AND TEACHING INTERESTS Behavioral Finance, Corporate Finance, Asset Pricing OTHER ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES Director, American Finance Association, 2014 – Investments Committee, Ethics Committee Senior Academic Fellow, Asian Bureau of Financial and Economic Research, 2012 – Associate Editor, Journal of Financial Economics, 2011 – Associate Editor, Review of Asset Pricing Studies, 2011 – Special Issue Editor, Journal of Financial Economics, May 2012 NYU Stern Promotion and Tenure Committee, 2010 – 2013 Associate Editor, Management Science, 2009 – 2013 Research Associate, NBER, Corporate Finance, 2009 – Asset Pricing, 2009 – Editorial Board, SSRN, Behavioral and Experimental Finance, 2008 – History of Finance, 2008 – NYU Stern Finance PhD Program, Chair, 2008-2009 Co-Chair, 2007-2008 Faculty Research Fellow, NBER, Corporate Finance, 2003 – 2008 AWARDS AND RELATED Plenary Speaker, Tokyo RBF World Conference, 2015 Keynote Speaker, Duisenberg School of Finance, 2014 Jensen Prize, Second Place, Journal of Financial Economics, 2012 Keynote Speaker, Midwest Finance Association, Orlando, 2014 Graham and Dodd Scroll, Financial Analysts Journal, 2012 William F. -
Andrei Shleifer
ANDREI SHLEIFER HOME ADDRESS AND TELEPHONE: OFFICE ADDRESS AND TELEPHONE: 38 Bracebridge Road Department of Economics Newton, Massachusetts 02459 Harvard University 617/969-5347 M9 Littauer Center Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 617/495-5046 (Fax: 617/496-1708) Date of Birth: February 20, 1961 Citizenship: U.S.A. Undergraduate Studies: Harvard, A.B., Math, 1982. Graduate Studies: MIT, Ph.D., May, 1986. Thesis Title: AThe Business Cycle and the Stock Market@ EMPLOYMENT: Whipple V. N. Jones Professor of Economics, Harvard University, 2002 to present. Professor of Economics, Harvard University, 1991 - 2002. Professor of Finance and Business Economics, Graduate School of Business, The University of Chicago, 1989 - 1990. Assistant Professor of Finance and Business Economics, Graduate School of Business, The University of Chicago, 1987 - 1989. Assistant Professor of Economics, Princeton University, 1986 - 1987. OTHER AFFILIATIONS: Faculty Research Fellow and Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1986 - . Associate and Advisory Editor, Journal of Financial Economics, 1988 - . Associate Editor, Journal of Finance, 1988 - 1991. Editor, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1989 to 1999. Advisor, Government of Russia, 1991 to 1997. Principal, LSV Asset Management, 1994 - 2003. Editor, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2003 - . ANDREI SHLEIFER 2 January, 2005 AWARDS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND GRANTS: National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, 1983-1986. CRSP Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Graduate School of Business, The University of Chicago, March-June, 1986. Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, 1990. National Science Foundation Grants, 1988-1989, 1990-1991, 1994-1996, 1998-2000, 2001 - 2003. Presidential Young Investigator Award, 1989-1994. Bradley Foundation Grant, 1989, 1990, 1991-1992. Russell Sage Foundation Grant (with R. Vishny), 1988, 1991. -
Jones Graduate School of Management Award for Scholarship Excellence
Gustavo Grullon Jesse H. Jones Professor of Finance Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Business Tel: (713) 348-6138 Rice University Fax: (713) 348-6331 P.O. Box 2932 [email protected] Houston, Texas 77252-2932 http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~grullon/ Education Ph.D. in Management (January 1999) S. C. Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University M.S. in Management (August 1997) S. C. Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University American Economic Association Summer Training Program (Summer 1992) Stanford University B.B.A., Magna Cum Laude (May 1991) University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras Campus Majors: Finance and Economics Academic Positions Jones Graduate School of Business, Rice University Jesse H. Jones Professor of Finance July 2015 – Present Professor of Finance July 2011 – June 2015 Associate Professor of Finance July 2005 – June 2011 Assistant Professor of Finance July 1998 –June 2005 University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras Campus Visiting Professor (Summer Sessions) June 2007 – Present Instructor August 1992 – May 1993 Professional Positions Accumyn Consulting Independent Consultant January 2010 – Present House of Representatives of Puerto Rico Economic Advisor May 1991 – July 1993 Research Interests Empirical Corporate Finance Empirical Asset Pricing Courses Taught Seminar in Corporate Finance (First-Year Ph.D. Course, Rice University) Corporate Investment Policy (Second-Year MBA Course, Rice University) Corporate Financial Policy (Second-Year MBA and Executive-MBA Course, Rice University) Corporate Finance (First-Year -
Tobias J. Moskowitz, Ph.D
Tobias J. Moskowitz, Ph.D. YaleSchoolofManagement Phone: (203)436-5361 YaleUniversity Fax: (203)742-3257 165 Whitney Ave. Email: [email protected] Room 4524 [email protected] New Haven, CT 06520 Website: http://som.yale.edu/tobias-j-moskowitz Positions/Affiliations 2016- Dean Takahashi ’80 B.A., ’83 M.P.P.M Professor of Finance, Yale University, Yale SOM Courses taught: Applied Quantitative Finance (MBA, Ph.D.); Factor Investing (Exec. Ed.); The Investor (MBA); Sports Analytics (MBA, Undergrad) 2008-15 Fama Family Professor of Finance, University of Chicago, Booth School of Business Courses taught: Investments (MBA); Investments I (Exec. Ed.); Real Estate (Exec. Ed.); Quantitative Investments (MBA); Empirical Asset Pricing (Ph.D.); Sports Analytics (MBA) 2015-16 Visiting Professor of Finance, Yale University, School of Management 2007- Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research 2007- Consultant and Principal, AQR Capital Management, LLC 2005-08 Professor of Finance and Neubauer Family Faculty Fellow, University of Chicago, Booth School of Business 2002-05 Associate Professor of Finance, University of Chicago, Booth School of Business 1998-02 Assistant Professor of Finance, University of Chicago, Booth School of Business Education 1998 Ph.D. (Finance), UCLA Anderson School 1994 M.S. (Management), Purdue University Krannert Graduate School of Management 1993 B.S. (Industrial Engineering/Management) with Distinction, Purdue University Honors/Awards Career Awards: 2012 Ewing Marion Kauffman Medal (top entrepreneurship -
2001 Report: Richard Green, Editor
THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE • VOL. LVII, NO. 4 • AUGUST 2002 AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION Report of the Editor of The Journal of Finance for the Year 2001 This report covers my first full year as Editor of the Journal of Finance. The Journal is doing very well. Submissions are running at a record pace, we are attracting outstanding papers across the full range of topics in fi- nancial economics, and turnaround times are very good. The transition from the previous editor is almost complete. The Journal continues to provide the scholarly community in financial economics an outlet that is both broadly representative and high quality. I. Transition between Editorial Offices The first papers I accepted appeared in the June issue of this past year. In the remaining issues for 2001 a majority of the papers were accepted by René Stulz, the previous editor. During 2002, this will change over, and most issues will consist predominantly of papers I have accepted. The February 2002 issue contains 19 papers, 5 of which I accepted. The April, June, and October issues, which have all been scheduled, will each contain 3 or 4 papers accepted by René. There are no remaining active files still being handled by René. He and Robyn Scholl, his assistant at Ohio State, have continued to offer help and guidance cheerfully whenever the need has arisen, and I appreciate their help very much. II. Journal Size As part of the transition, the Executive Committee agreed to increase the page budget for the Journal during the year 2000. In the six issues in 2000 the Journal published 98 papers ~81 in the regular issues!. -
Xavier Gabaix
Xavier Gabaix Stern School of Business, Finance Department New York University Ph: 212-998-0257 44 West 4th Street, 9-190 [email protected] New York, NY 10012, USA http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~xgabaix/ Education HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Cambridge, MA Ph.D. in Economics, 1995-1999. Advisors: Robert Barro, John Campbell, Donald Davis, Edward Glaeser. ECOLE NORMALE SUPÉRIEURE, Paris, France B.A. and agrégation of Mathematics, 1991-1995 Professional affiliations and activities NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, Stern School of Business, Finance Department, New York, NY. Martin J. Gruber Professor of Finance, since 2010. Professor of finance, 2009-2010. Associate Professor of Finance, 2007-2009. MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, Department of Economics, Cambridge, MA. Rudi Dornbusch Career Development Assistant then Associate Professor of Economics, 2004-7. Assistant Professor of Economics, 1999 – 2003. Post-Doctoral Fellow, 1998 – 1999. NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH: Faculty Research Associate, 2010-, Research Fellow, 2002-2010 (Asset Pricing, Corporate Finance, Economic Fluctuations and Growth, International Finance and Macroeconomics) CENTER FOR ECONOMIC POLICY RESEARCH: Research Fellow, 2009-present (Financial Economics, Macroeconomics) EUROPEAN CORPORATE GOVERNANCE INSTITUTE: Research Associate, 2011-present VISITING POSITIONS Princeton University: July 2006-2007. New York University: June-August 2001, 2002. University of Chicago: September 1999-June 2000; part 2013 (Ford Foundation Visiting Professor of Finance) Personal Born in August 1971, French citizen, US Permanent resident (green card). 1 Honors and Awards Maurice Allais Prize, 2015 Lagrange Prize for research on complex systems, 2012 (CRT Foundation) Rising Star in Finance Award, 2012 Fischer Black Prize, awarded every two years by the American Finance Association to the person under 40 who contributed the most to finance, 2011. -
Reporter NATIONAL BUREAU of ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NBER Reporter NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH Reporter OnLine at: www.nber.org/reporter 2012 Number 1 Program Report IN THIS ISSUE Program Report The Changing Focus of Public Public Economics 1 Economics Research, 1980–2010 Research Summaries Private Health Insurance Markets 7 Transfer of Knowledge across Countries 10 Raj Chetty and Amy Finkelstein* Inflation Forecasting 13 Wealth After Retirement 16 The NBER’s Program on Public Economics (PE) has covered a very wide range of topics since the last program report six years ago. Rather than NBER Profiles 19 attempting to summarize the entire corpus of work that has been done by Conferences 21 this program in the past few years, this report provides a bird’s eye view NBER News 25 of some of the major changes in the field from two perspectives. First, we Program and Working Group Meetings 29 quantify the main trends in public finance research at the NBER over the Bureau Books 35 last thirty years, drawing on statistics from the database of NBER Working Papers. Second, we qualitatively summarize some of the emerging themes of recent research, both in terms of topics and methods. A Statistical Perspective The Public Economics Program began as the Business Taxation and Finance Program, which held its first meeting under the direction of David Bradford in December 1977. It was renamed the Taxation Program in 1980, to reflect the broader research interests of its affiliated researchers. To recog- nize the importance of expenditure as well as tax research, the program was renamed “Public Economics” in 1991, when James Poterba succeeded David Bradford as Program Director.