Nicholas Bloom
Stanford University
Nick Bloom is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Stanford University, having previously worked at the Centre for Economic Performance, and the Institute for Fiscal Studies. His main research interests are on measuring and explaining management and organisational practices across firms and countries, and trying to use this to explain differences in firm and country level growth. He also works on innovation and IT, looking at factors that effect these such as competition, tax, learning and Government regulations. A third area of research is on the causes and consequences of uncertainty, arising both from one-off events like the 9/11 terrorist attack and the Cuban Missile crisis, and also from slower-moving uncertainty fluctuations over the business cycle. He previously worked as a policy advisor at HM Treasury and as a management consultant a McKinsey & Company. He is a graduate of Cambridge University, with a PhD from University College London.
Articles by Nicholas Bloom:
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Economic recovery and policy uncertainty in the US
29 October 2012, 12086 reads
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The Rocky Balboa recovery: Is policy uncertainty holding it back?
20 June 2012, 7271 reads
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Falling policy uncertainty is igniting the US recovery
7 February 2012, 7535 reads
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Policy uncertainty and the stalled recovery
22 October 2011, 7337 reads
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The price of market uncertainty is a double-dip recession
26 August 2011, 5501 reads
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The uncertainty shock will cause a recession: Evidence from 16 previous episodes
22 August 2011, 25447 reads
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“The Office” goes to India: How bad management keeps India poor
13 April 2011, 14985 reads
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Who’s afraid of the big bad dragon? How Chinese trade boosts European innovation
3 February 2011, 13861 reads
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Why good practices really matter in healthcare
17 December 2010, 9487 reads
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Modern management: Good for the environment or just hot air?
16 May 2010, 9201 reads
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Halfway to recovery
17 April 2009, 28233 reads
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Good news at last? The recession will be over sooner than you think
12 January 2009, 80843 reads
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2009 will be the nightmare on Main Street
18 November 2008, 16329 reads
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The credit crunch may cause another great depression
8 October 2008, 49577 reads
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Will the credit crunch lead to recession?
4 June 2008, 16425 reads
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Can European firms close their ‘management gap’ with the US?
12 July 2007, 31455 reads
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