Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Francisco Rodríguez (economist)

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Institution
  
Torino Capital LLC, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, United Nations Human Development Report Office, Wesleyan University

Alma mater
  
Harvard University, Andrés Bello Catholic University

Education
  
Harvard University, Andrés Bello Catholic University

Francisco R. Rodríguez is a Venezuelan economist and the Chief Economist at Torino Capital LLC. He has taught economics and Latin American studies at University of Maryland at College Park and Wesleyan University. From 2000 to 2004, he served as the head of the Office of Economic and Financial Advisory of the Venezuelan National Assembly (Spanish: Oficina de Asesoría Económica y Financiera de Asamblea Nacional) during the presidency of Hugo Chávez.

Contents

Rodríguez received an M.A. and Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University, and an undergraduate degree in economics from Venezuela's Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. He has been an associate editor of Economía: Journal of the Latin American and Caribbean Economic Association since 2008.

Academic contributions

Rodríguez has written more than 40 papers on economic growth, development economics, political economy and the Venezuelan economy. These include "Trade Policy and Economic Growth: A Skeptic's Guide to the Cross-National Evidence" (joint with Dani Rodrik), "Why Do Resource-Abundant Economies Grow More Slowly?" (joint with Jeffrey Sachs), "Inequality, Redistribution and Rent-Seeking" and "Cleaning Up the Kitchen Sink:Specification tests and average derivative estimators for growth econometrics" (joint with Cameron Shelton). He has also co-edited, jointly with Ricardo Hausmann, the book Venezuela Before Chávez: Anatomy of an Economic Collapse.

Rodríguez and the Chávez Administration

Rodríguez was an early supporter of the Chávez administration. In 2000, he was elected with the support of both opposition and government parties to head the National Assembly's Economic and Financial Advisory Office. Under his tenure, the office produced several reports that were critical of official economic policy, eventually leading to his ouster by the pro-government majority in March 2004. His differences with chavismo as well as with Venezuela's opposition were set out in a number of articles published after he returned to academia at Wesleyan University in 2005. His article, "An Empty Revolution: The Unfulfilled Promises of Hugo Chávez", was published in Foreign Affairs, a podcast "Rodriguez: Venezuela Nationalizations Might Be A 'Smokescreen'" was hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations, and he has been quoted a number of times in media reports on the Chávez administration. He also published several assessments of Chávez-era social end economic polocies in academic journals, including "Freed from Illiteracy? A Closer Look at Venezuela´s Misión Robinson Literacy Campaign" and "The price of political opposition: Evidence from Venezuela's Maisanta".

This extract from his Foreign Affairs article illustrates Rodríguez´s differences with the Chávez administration:

In September 2000, I left American academia to take over a research team with functions broadly similar to those of the U.S. Congressional Budget Office. I had high expectations for Chávez's government and was excited at the possibility of working in an administration that promised to focus on fighting poverty and inequality. But I quickly discovered how large the gap was between the government's rhetoric and the reality of its political priorities.

Soon after joining the National Assembly, I clashed with the administration over underfunding of [the program] which had been created by Chávez to coordinate the distribution of resources to antipoverty programs. The law establishing the fund included a special provision to ensure that it would benefit from rising oil revenues. But when oil revenues started to go up, the Finance Ministry ignored the provision ... When my office pointed out this inconsistency, the Finance Ministry came up with [a] creative accounting gimmick ... [whose] effect was to direct resources away from the poor even as oil profits were surging.

DePaul University and the Financial Times have hosted discussions focused on the debate over Chávez's economic policies between Mark Weisbrot and Rodríguez.

Rodríguez at UNDP (2008-2011)

In 2008, Rodríguez became the Head of Research of the United Nations Human Development Report Office. He coordinated the research for three influential reports: Overcoming barriers: Human mobility and development The Real Wealth of Nations: Pathways to Human Development and Sustainability and Equity: A Better future for All.

Rodríguez at Bank of America (2011-2016)

Rodríguez joined Bank of America Merrill Lynch in August 2011 as Chief Andean Economist,covering the economies of Colombia, Peru and Venezuela. In 2012 he successfully called the Venezuelan presidential elections with an out-of-consensus prediction that Chávez would be re-elected by a comfortable margin. He has argued that Venezuela carried out an external adjustment via quantities instead of prices during the Maduro administration, making the potential output and inflationary costs of internal price adjustment lower than typically believed. In September 2014 he responded to a Project Syndicate article by Ricardo Hausmann and Miguel Angel Santos which had criticized the Maduro administration for continuing to honor debt service despite pervasive scarcities of basic goods. In his response, Rodríguez argued that scarcity was driven by relative price distortions and should be addressed by loosening the country´s tight price and exchange controls rather than defaulting on its debt. He left Bank of America in early 2016.

Rodriguez at Torino Capital (Present)

Rodriguez joined Torino Capital in July 2016 as its Chief Economist.

References

Francisco Rodríguez (economist) Wikipedia