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Michael
Woodford
Michael Woodford is the John Bates Clark Professor of Political
Economy at Columbia University. His first academic appointment was at
Columbia in 1984, after which he held positions at the University of
Chicago and Princeton University, before returning to Columbia in 2004.
He received his A.B. from the University of Chicago, his J.D. from Yale
Law School, and his Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. He has been a MacArthur Fellow and a Guggenheim Fellow,
and is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, as well
as a Fellow of the Econometric Society, a Research Associate of the
National Bureau of Economic Research (Cambridge, Mass.), and a Research
Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research (London). In 2007 he
was awarded the Deutsche Bank Prize in Financial Economics.
Woodford’s primary research interests are in macroeconomic
theory and monetary policy. He has written extensively about the
microeconomic foundations of the monetary transmission mechanism,
the role of interest rates in inflation determination, rules for
the conduct of monetary policy, central-bank communication policy,
interactions between monetary and fiscal policy, and the consequences
of electronic payments for monetary control. His most important work
is the treatise Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of
Monetary Policy, recipient of the 2003 Association of American
Publishers Award for Best Professional/Scholarly Book in Economics. He
is also co-author or co-editor of several other volumes, including a
three-volume Handbook of Macroeconomics (with John B. Taylor)
and The Inflation Targeting Debate (with Ben S. Bernanke). He
serves on a Monetary Policy Advisory Panel for the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York, and frequently lectures at and consults for other central
banks as well.
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