Gregory Mankiw
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Naissance : | 3 février 1958 (États-Unis) |
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Domicile : | Wellesley dans le Massachusetts |
Nationalité : | américaine |
Champs : | Économie (Nouveau keynésianisme) |
Institution : | MIT, Université d’Harvard |
Diplômé : | Université de Princeton, Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Célèbre pour : | ses travaux économiques (nouveau keynésianisme, croissance économique), conseiller du président Bush Junior |
Gregory Nicholas Mankiw est un macroéconomiste américain de la Nouvelle économie keynésienne né le 3 février 1958 dans le New Jersey de père ingénieur et de mère enseignante. Plutôt très doué, malgré une faiblesse marquée en langues, il commence des études de mathématiques. Avant de s'envoler très vite vers les sciences économiques.
Il a entrepris ses études d’économie à l’Université de Princeton, où il réussit ses candidatures en 1980 avec le grade Summa cum laude. Il s’envola après au Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) où il décrocha sa maîtrise en économie. Il commence, après le MIT à enseigner à l’Université d’Harvard dès 1985 et devient dans la même Université professeur ordinaire deux ans après.
Ses recherches portent sur les ajustements des prix, sur les marchés financiers, sur le comportement des consommateurs, en passant par les théories de la croissance économique et par les politiques monétaires et budgétaires. Il est l’auteur de nombreux ouvrages et articles.
Il est actuellement professeur d’économie à l’Université d'Harvard où il enseigne la macroéconomie. Au-delà de l’enseignement, il dirige le programme d’économie monétaire du National Bureau of Economic Research et est conseiller de la réserve fédérale des États-Unis de Boston et du Congressional Budget Office. Il a été nommé président de George W. Bush's Council of Economic Advisers le 29 mai 2003.
Il vit à Wellesley dans le Massachusetts, avec sa femme Deborah et leurs trois enfants Peter, Nicholas et Catherine.
[modifier] Quelques publications
- Macroeconomics, 1992; 2nd ed., 1994; 3rd ed., 1997; 4th ed., 2000; 5th ed., 2003; 6th ed., 2007, Worth Publishers. Traduit en Arménien, Chinois, Français, Allemand, Grec, Hongrois, Indonésien, Italien, Japonais, Coréen, Portugais, Roumain, Russe, Espagnol, et Ukrainien. édition canadienne disponible également.
- Principles of Economics, 1998; 2nd ed., 2001; 3rd ed., 2004; 4th ed., 2007, Thomson Southwestern. Traduit en Azéri, Chinois, Croate, Tchec, Néerlandais, Français, Géorgien, Allemand, Grec, Indonésien, Italien, Japonais, Coréen, Macédonien, Monténégrin, Portugais, Roumain, Russe, Serbe, et Espagnol. Éditions Australienne et Canadienne disponibles également.
- Hall's Consumption Hypothesis and Durable Goods, Journal of Monetary Economics 10, Nov. 1982, 417-426.
- Intertemporal Substitution in Macroeconomics, with Julio Rotemberg and Lawrence Summers, Quarterly Journal of Economics 100, Feb. 1985, 225-251.
- [www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/mankiw/files/Small_Menu_Costs.pdf Small Menu Costs and Large Business Cycles: A Macroeconomic Model of Monopoly, Quarterly Journal of Economics 100, May 1985, 529-537.]
- The Changing Behavior of the Term Structure of Interest Rates, with Jeffrey Miron, Quarterly Journal of Economics 101, May 1986, 211-228.
- Free Entry and Social Inefficiency, with Michael Whinston, Rand Journal of Economics 17, Spring 1986, 48-58.
- Ricardian Consumers with Keynesian Propensities, with Robert Barsky and Stephen Zeldes, American Economic Review 76, Sept. 1986, 676-691.
- The Equity Premium and the Concentration of Aggregate Shocks, Journal of Financial Economics 17, 1986, 211-219.
- [www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/mankiw/files/Allocation_of_Credit.pdf The Allocation of Credit and Financial Collapse, Quarterly Journal of Economics 101, Aug. 1986, 455-470.]
- Money Demand and the Effects of Fiscal Policies, with Lawrence Summers, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 18, Nov. 1986, 415-429.
- [www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/mankiw/files/Government_Purchases.pdf Government Purchases and Real Interest Rates, Journal of Political Economy 95, Apr. 1987, 407-419.]
- The Adjustment of Expectations to a Change in Regime: A Study of the Founding of the Federal Reserve, with Jeffrey Miron and David Weil, American Economic Review 77, June 1987, 358-374.
- The Optimal Collection of Seigniorage: Theory and Evidence, Journal of Monetary Economics 20, Sept.1987, 327-341.
- Permanent and Transitory Components in Macroeconomic Fluctuations, with John Campbell, American Economic Review 77, May 1987, 111-117.
- Are Output Fluctuations Transitory? with John Campbell, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Nov. 1987, 857- 880.
- The New Keynesian Economics and the Output-Inflation Trade-off, with Laurence Ball and David Romer, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1988:1, 1-65.
- Assessing Dynamic Efficiency: Theory and Evidence, with Andrew Abel, Lawrence Summers, and Richard Zeckhauser, Review of Economic Studies 56, Jan. 1989, 1-20.
- International Evidence on the Persistence of Economic Fluctuations, with John Campbell, Journal of Monetary Economics 23, Mar. 1989, 319-333.
- Real Business Cycles: A New Keynesian Perspective, Journal of Economic Perspectives 3, Summer 1989, 79-90.
- The Baby Boom, the Baby Bust, and the Housing Market, with David Weil, Regional Science and Urban Economics 19, 1989, 235-258.
- Precautionary Saving and the Timing of Taxes, with Miles Kimball, Journal of Political Economy 97, Aug.1989, 863-879.
- Consumption, Income, and Interest Rates: Reinterpreting the Time Series Evidence, with John Campbell, NBER Macroeconomics Annual 4, 1989, 185-216.
- Permanent Income, Current Income, and Consumption, with John Campbell, Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 8, July 1990, 265-280.
- A Quick Refresher Course in Macroeconomics, Journal of Economic Literature 28, Dec. 1990, 1645-1660.
- The Consumption of Stockholders and Non-Stockholders, with Stephen Zeldes, Journal of Financial Economics 29, Mar. 1991, 97-112.
- The Response of Consumption to Income: A Cross-Country Investigation, with John Campbell, European Economic Review 35, 1991, 723-767.
- A Contribution to the Empirics of Economic Growth, with David Romer and David Weil, Quarterly Journal of Economics 107, May 1992, 407-437.
- Asymmetric Price Adjustment and Economic Fluctuations, with Laurence Ball, Economic Journal 104, Mar.1994, 247-261.
- Relative-Price Changes as Aggregate Supply Shocks, with Laurence Ball, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Feb. 1995, 161-193.
- Capital Mobility in Neoclassical Models of Growth, with Robert Barro and Xavier Sala-i-Martin, American Economic Review 85, Mar. 1995, 103-115.
- The Growth of Nations, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1995:1, 275-326.
- An Asset Allocation Puzzle, with Niko Canner and David Weil, American Economic Review 87, Mar. 1997, 181-191.
- The Deficit Gamble, with Laurence Ball and Douglas Elmendorf, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 30, Nov. 1998, 699-720.
- Government Debt, with Douglas Elmendorf, Handbook of Macroeconomics, North Holland, 1999.
- The Savers-Spenders Theory of Fiscal Policy, American Economic Review 90, May 2000, 120-125.
- The Inexorable and Mysterious Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment, Economic Journal 111, May 2001, C45-C61.
- U.S. Monetary Policy During the 1990s, American Economic Policy in the 1990s, MIT Press, 2002.
- Sticky Information versus Sticky Prices: A Proposal to Replace the New Keynesian Phillips Curve, with Ricardo Reis, Quarterly Journal of Economics 117, Nov. 2002, 1295-1328.
- The NAIRU in Theory and Practice, with Laurence Ball, Journal of Economic Perspectives 16, Fall 2002, 115-136.
- Sticky Information: A Model of Monetary Nonneutrality and Structural Slumps, with Ricardo Reis, Knowledge, Information, and Expectations in Modern Macroeconomics: Essays in Honor of Edmund S. Phelps, Princeton University Press, forthcoming.
- What Measure of Inflation Should a Central Bank Target?, with Ricardo Reis, 2002, Journal of the European Economic Association, forthcoming.
- Intergenerational Risk Sharing in the Spirit of Arrow, Debreu, and Rawls, with Applications to Social Security Design, with Laurence Ball, 2001.
- Monetary Policy for Inattentive Economies, with Laurence Ball and Ricardo Reis, 2002.
- N. Gregory Mankiw (May 1985). "Small Menu Costs and Large Business Cycles: A Macroeconomic Model of Monopoly". Quarterly Journal of Economics 100: 529-537.
- N. Gregory Mankiw, David Romer, and David Weil (May 1992). "A Contribution to the Empirics of Economic Growth". Quarterly Journal of Economics 107: 407-437.
- Gregory Mankiw, The Macroeconomist as Scientist and Engineer, NBER Working Paper 12349, juin 2006