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Michele Boldrin

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Nationality
  
Italy and USA

Influenced by
  
Lionel W. McKenzie

Role
  
Economist

Name
  
Michele Boldrin

Influences
  
Lionel W. McKenzie


Michele Boldrin Tipi da quotFarequot3 Boldrin un liberalmoralista contro

Born
  
August 20, 1956 (age 67) (
1956-08-20
)
Padua, Italy

Institution
  
Washington University in St. Louis

Alma mater
  
Ca' Foscari University of Venice, University of Rochester

Contributions
  
Policy functions, dynamic programming, endogenous fluctuations and chaos in dynamic models, growth theory

Books
  
Against intellectual monopoly, Asset Pricing Lessons for Modeling Business Cycles

Education
  
University of Rochester, Ca' Foscari University of Venice

Fields
  
Macroeconomics, General equilibrium theory, Public policy

Similar People
  
David K Levine, Oscar Giannino, Luigi Zingales, Alberto Bagnai, Alberto Bisin

Stimulus SmackDown: Can Deficit Spending Save the Economy?


Michele Boldrin ([miˈkɛːle]; August 20, 1956) is an Italian-born economist, expert in economic growth, business cycles, technological progress and intellectual property. He is currently the Joseph Gibson Hoyt Distinguished Professor in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. Along with his colleague and coauthor David Levine, he was part of the group of 200 economists publicly opposing the 2009 Stimulus bill. He later publicly defended his position on the issue in various international media, including a public debate with Brad DeLong.

Contents

Michele Boldrin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Michele boldrin parla di economia a ca foscari


Biography

Boldrin was born and raised in Padua, Italy, and later moved to Venice. He did his undergraduate studies at the University of Venice. He then received his M.S. (1985) and Ph.D. (1987) in economics from the University of Rochester in New York, under the supervision of Lionel McKenzie. Before moving to St. Louis in the Fall of 2006, he worked at University of Chicago (1986–87), UCLA (1987–94), Kellogg School of Management (1990–94), Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (1994–99), and University of Minnesota (1999–2006). He is a research fellow at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis since 2006.

He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, a past Associate Editor of Econometrica and (past) Editor and (current) Associate Editor of the Review of Economic Dynamics, among other academic journals. He (co-)wrote four books and was a visiting professor in Barcelona, Rio de Janeiro, Mexico City, Tokyo, and a number of other places. He is affiliated with CEPR and director of FEDEA. He is one of the founding editors of the (Italian) blog noiseFromAmerika and he contributes regularly to Against Monopoly and Nada es Gratis, which are respectively in English and Spanish. His two most recent books are Against Intellectual Monopoly, coauthored with David K. Levine (CUP, 2008) and Tremonti, istruzioni per il disuso, coauthored with Alberto Bisin, Sandro Brusco, Andrea Moro and Giulio Zanella (Ancora, 2010), in Italian.

Boldrin is a member of the Board of Trustees and the Scientific Council of Foundation IMDEA Social Sciences.

Research

Michele Boldrin conducts ongoing research in dynamic general equilibrium theory, focusing specifically on the sources of business fluctuations, growth and development, technological innovation, and intellectual property. Collaborating with David K. Levine, Boldrin examines the role played by competitive versus monopolistic markets in growth and innovation. They posit that little evidence exists for the presence of increasing returns at the aggregate level, and thus argue that there is no reason to believe that increasing returns play an important role in actual economic growth. This implies that, in theory as in practice, competitive markets favor and promote continued growth and innovation, whereas monopoly power is not necessary and probably harmful to technological change and economic development. Their theory concludes that existing claims for the necessity of intellectual property in the process of growth and innovation are greatly exaggerated.

Books

  • Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine, Against Intellectual Monopoly, Cambridge University Press, 2008.
  • References

    Michele Boldrin Wikipedia