David Vines
Oxford University and CEPR
http://www.economics.ox.ac.uk/index.php/staff/vines
David Vines is Professor of Economics in the Economics Department, Oxford University, and a Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford as well as Director of the Centre for International Macroeconomics at Oxford’s Economics Department. Formerly a Houblon-Norman Senior Fellow at the Bank of England, he has advised a number of international organisations and governmental bodies. He has published numerous scholarly articles and several books, most recently The Asian Financial Crisis: Causes, Contagion and Consequences with Pierre-Richard Agénor, Marcus Miller, and Axel Weber.
Articles by David Vines:
-
The leaderless global economy: Can economic history suggest lessons?
13 March 2013, 13002 reads
-
The Eurozone crisis: Greek recovery and the challenges of asymmetric monetary union
5 August 2011, 6082 reads
-
How to rescue the Eurozone: Lessons from Southeast Asia
15 June 2010, 8193 reads
-
European financial vulnerability and the need for a rules-based international monetary system
4 June 2010, 13963 reads
Don't Miss
Helicopter money as a policy option
Reichlin, Turner, Woodford
Most Read
- Fiscal consolidation: At what speed?Blanchard, Leigh
- Escaping liquidity traps: Lessons from the UK’s 1930s escapeCrafts
- The lessons of the North Atlantic crisis for economic theory and policyStiglitz
- Helicopter money as a policy optionReichlin, Turner, Woodford
- Rethinking macroeconomic policyBlanchard
- A tale of two depressions: What do the new data tell us? February 2010 updateEichengreen, O’Rourke