Joshua Aizenman
University of Southern California
Joshua Aizenman joined the faculty at USC in 2013, where he serves as the Dockson Chair in Economics and International Relations. His research covers a range of issues in the open economy. Joshua also serves as a Research Associate for the National Bureau of Economic Research, and co-editor of the Journal of International Money and Finance. Other affiliations have included teaching and research positions at UC Santa Cruz, Dartmouth, the University of Chicago GSB, the University of Pennsylvania, and the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Consulting relationships include the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Asian Development Bank, and the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
Articles by Joshua Aizenman:
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Public and private saving and the long shadow of macroeconomic shocks
29 May 2013, 8018 reads
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Why do emerging markets liberalise capital-outflow controls? Fiscal versus net capital flow concerns
2 May 2013, 5569 reads
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Macroeconomic adjustment and the history of crises in open economies
21 November 2012, 8779 reads
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US Banking over two centuries: Lessons for the Eurozone crisis
16 October 2012, 3043 reads
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Housing or education? Lessons from the US and Germany
25 August 2012, 5850 reads
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Income inequality, tax base, and sovereign spreads
30 June 2012, 11925 reads
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The euro and the global crises: Finding the balance between short-term stabilisation and forward-looking reforms
5 June 2012, 10800 reads
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Developing country and emerging market vulnerability to the Eurozone crisis
19 May 2012, 13252 reads
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The housing market and the case for higher inflation targets in the US and the Eurozone
15 May 2012, 10151 reads
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Central banks and gold puzzles
19 March 2012, 10109 reads
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How much do international reserves buffer terms-of-trade shocks?
14 January 2012, 7355 reads
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The trilemma in China and India
15 November 2011, 9374 reads
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Capital flows and growth: 1990–2010
28 October 2011, 7776 reads
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Managing financial integration and capital mobility: Lessons from emerging markets
4 October 2011, 7679 reads
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The fiscal stimulus of 2009-10: trade openness, fiscal space, and exchange-rate adjustment
30 September 2011, 5516 reads
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The risk of default in the Eurozone: New analysis of fiscal space, CDS spreads, and market pricing of risk
8 September 2011, 11385 reads
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De facto fiscal space and fiscal stimulus: Definition and assessment
4 December 2010, 7930 reads
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Fiscal fragility: What the past may say about the future
7 November 2010, 7806 reads
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From the Great Moderation to the global crisis: Ten years of exchange-market pressure
22 October 2010, 8457 reads
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Is Germany the new China? A sceptical view
5 October 2010, 14340 reads
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International reserves and swap lines: substitutes or complements?
3 April 2010, 10223 reads
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The US fiscal stimulus: Less than what you might think
3 March 2010, 17493 reads
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Using inflation to erode the US public debt
18 December 2009, 50787 reads
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Hoarding international reserves: Lessons from the crisis
30 November 2009, 9848 reads
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The fear of depleting international reserves
15 October 2009, 9041 reads
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Sovereign wealth funds, governance, and reserve accumulation
16 January 2009, 12872 reads
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Empirical evidence on the monetary policy trilemma since 1970
9 January 2009, 35996 reads
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Networking, citation of academic research, and premature death
30 April 2008, 9871 reads
Don't Miss
The wisdom of Karlsruhe: The OMT court case should be dismissed
Giavazzi, Portes, Weder di Mauro, Wyplosz
