Charles Wyplosz
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Affiliation: Graduate Institute, Geneva; and CEPR Charles Wyplosz is Professor of International Economics at the Graduate Institute, Geneva; where he is Director of the International Centre for Money and Banking Studies. Previously, he has served as Associate Dean for Research and Development at INSEAD and Director of the PhD program in Economics at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Science Sociales in Paris. He has also been Director of the International Macroeconomics Program at CEPR. His main research areas include financial crises, European monetary integration, fiscal policy, economic transition and current regional integration in various parts of the world. He is the co-author of a leading textbook on Macroeconomics and on European economic integration. He was a founding Managing Editor of the review Economic Policy. He serves on several boards of professional reviews and European research centres. Currently a member of the Group of Independent Economic Advisors to the President of the European Commission, and of the Panel of Experts of the European Parliament’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee, as well as a member of the “Bellagio Group”, Charles Wyplosz is an occasional consultant to the European Commission, the IMF, the World Bank, the United Nations, the Asian Development Bank, and the Inter-American Development Bank. He has been a member of the “Conseil d’Analyse Economique” which reports to the Prime Minister of France, of the French Finance Minister’s “Commission des Comptes de la Nation” and has advised the governments of the Russian Federation and of Cyprus. He holds degrees in Engineering and Statistics from Paris and a PhD in Economics from Harvard University. |
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Recent articles by Charles Wyplosz 
- The Eurozone’s levitation
- European Stabilisation Mechanism: Promises, realities and principles
- The Greek package: Eurozone rescue or seeds of an unravelled monetary union?
- Is an undervalued renmimbi the source of global imbalances?
- Germany, current accounts, and competitiveness
- Europe’s macro mess: Dysfunctional diversity that gets the job done
- How to destroy the Eurozone: Feldstein’s euro-holiday idea
- The Eurozone debt crisis: Facts and myths
- The failure of the Lisbon strategy
- Greece: The party is over
- The outcome of the G20 Summit: A sceptic’s view
- Transatlantic divergence in tackling the crisis
- European government bailouts: Should we let one go broke?
- Can the G20 reform the international economic system?
- Financial regulation reform: The Goodhart Report
- Why government responses need to be comprehensive and coordinated
- Open Letter to European leaders on Europe’s banking crisis: A call to action
- Why Paulson is right (maybe): Saving the financial system from the bankers
- ECB’s low inflation credibility: How to fix the problem
- Wyplosz on the Summers vs Buiter bailout debate
- Commercial banks and the financial market crisis of 2007/2008
- Transparency and governance in the Eurozone
- Transparency and Governance
- Subprime crisis: Second best solutions
- Subprime crisis: Fed Discount Rate cut, how, why and what it means
- Subprime 'crisis': observations on the emerging debate
- Wake-up call for the ECB
- Tax-free overtime: Sarkozy’s experiment
- Forex reserves: weapons or insurance?
- Who's afraid of the Eurozone?
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