Julio Rotemberg
Argentine-American economist
Julio Rotemberg | |
---|---|
Born | (1953-09-26)September 26, 1953[1] Buenos Aires, Argentina [1] |
Died | April 2, 2017(2017-04-02) (aged 63)[1] Newton, Massachusetts, USA |
Academic career | |
Field | Monetary economics |
Institution | Harvard Business School MIT Sloan School of Management |
School or tradition | New Keynesian economics |
Alma mater | Princeton University California–Berkeley |
Doctoral advisor | Alan Blinder William Hoban Branson |
Contributions | First New Keynesian DSGE model, especially on monopolistic competition |
Information at IDEAS / RePEc | |
Julio Jacobo Rotemberg was an Argentine/American economist at Harvard Business School. He was known for his collaboration with Michael Woodford on the first New Keynesian DSGE model, especially on monopolistic competition.[2] He was also known for an alternative model of sticky prices.[3]
Rotemberg held a B.A. in economics (1975) from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Ph.D. in economics (1981) from Princeton University.
References
- ^ a b c "Harvard Business School Professor Julio Rotemberg Dies at 63 – News – Harvard Business School". www.hbs.edu. 6 April 2017. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- ^ Rotemberg, Julio; Woodford, Michael (1993), "Dynamic General Equilibrium Models with Imperfectly Competitive Product Markets", NBER Working Paper No. 4502, Cambridge, MA, doi:10.3386/w4502
- ^ Rotemberg, Julio J. (1982), "Sticky Prices in the United States", Journal of Political Economy, 90 (6): 1187–1211, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.675.8591, doi:10.1086/261117, JSTOR 1830944, S2CID 7965196
Selected publications
- "Sticky Prices in the United States". Journal of Political Economy, University of Chicago Press. December 1982.
- "The New Keynesian Microfoundations". NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1987, Volume 2.
- "Human Relations in the Workplace". Journal of Political Economy. August 1994.
- Rotemberg and Garth Saloner. "A Supergame-Theoretic Model of Price Wars during Booms". American Economic Review. June 1986.
External links
- Website at Harvard
- "Julio Rotemberg". EconPapers.
- "Julio Rotemberg". JSTOR.
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Keynesians
- Gardner Ackley
- William Baumol
- James Duesenberry
- Robert Eisner
- Trygve Haavelmo
- Alvin Hansen
- Roy Harrod
- Walter Heller
- John Hicks
- Lawrence Klein
- James Meade
- Lloyd Metzler
- Franco Modigliani
- Robert Mundell
- Arthur Melvin Okun
- Don Patinkin
- Bill Phillips
- William Poole
- Paul Samuelson
- Robert Solow
- James Tobin
- Victoria Chick
- Paul Davidson
- Evsey Domar
- James K. Galbraith
- John Kenneth Galbraith
- Wynne Godley
- Myron J. Gordon
- Geoff Harcourt
- Michael Hudson
- Richard Kahn
- Nicholas Kaldor
- Michał Kalecki
- Steve Keen
- Jan Kregel
- Marc Lavoie
- Abba P. Lerner
- Hyman Minsky
- Bill Mitchell
- Basil Moore
- Steven Pressman
- Joan Robinson
- G. L. S. Shackle
- Pavlina R. Tcherneva
- Anthony Thirlwall
- William Vickrey
- Sidney Weintraub
- L. Randall Wray
- George Akerlof
- Ben Bernanke
- Olivier Blanchard
- Alan Blinder
- Guillermo Calvo
- Richard Clarida
- Brad DeLong
- Huw Dixon
- Stanley Fischer
- Jordi Galí
- Mark Gertler
- Robert J. Gordon
- Stephany Griffith-Jones
- Nobuhiro Kiyotaki
- Paul Krugman
- Greg Mankiw
- Marc Melitz
- Maurice Obstfeld
- Edmund Phelps
- Ricardo Reis
- Kenneth Rogoff
- David Romer
- Julio Rotemberg
- Robert Shiller
- Andrei Shleifer
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Lawrence Summers
- John B. Taylor
- Michael Woodford
- Janet Yellen
Keynesian economics
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