Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Rania Antonopoulos

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Prime Minister
  
Alexis Tsipras

Spouse
  
Dimitri B. Papadimitriou

Role
  
Economist


Name
  
Rania Antonopoulos

Profession
  
Economist

Alma mater
  
The New School

Rania Antonopoulos

Born
  
December 17, 1960 (age 63) Athens, Greece (
1960-12-17
)

Political party
  
Coalition of the Radical Left (Syriza)

Books
  
Why President Obama Should Care about "care": An Effective and Equitable Investment Strategy for Job Creation

Rania antonopoulos responding to the unemployment crisis in greece


Rania Antonopoulos, born Ourania Antonopoulou (Greek: Ουρανία Αντωνοπούλου) on 17 December 1960 in Athens, is a Greek heterodox economist and Syriza politician. Since the January 2015 election, she has been the Greek Alternate Minister for Combatting Unemployment. Between February and August 2015, she also was a member of the Hellenic Parliament.

Contents

Rania Antonopoulos httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

A former adviser and consultant for UN Women, UNDP and the ILO, she is specialized in macroeconomic gender issues and unemployment. She is Associate Professor of Economics at New York Bard College and a senior scholar of the Levy Economics Institute where she is involved with the Modern Monetary Theory school of post-Keynesian economics.

A co-initiator of the Economists for Full Employment project, she has been a long-time supporter of a job guarantee with the state being employer of last resort. Following a successful 2011 pilot project, she has been appointed Alternate Minister for Combatting Unemployment in the Syriza-led Tsipras Government. In her ministerial office, she is specifically tasked with implementing a nationwide program to combat long-term unemployment by creating at least 300,000 new jobs for the unemployed.

Rania antonopoulos rispondere alla crisi dell occupazione in grecia


Education and early career

When in 1997 Antonopoulos received her Ph.D. economics from the New School for Social Research, she had already been teaching economics at New York University and in the same year was awarded the university's Teaching Excellence Award. New York University appointed her Associate Professor of Economics, a post she would hold until 2006.

Working in the fields of feminist economics, international trade, and the economics of globalization, Antonopoulos served as macroeconomic policy adviser for UN Women, and as advising consultant for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the International Labour Office (ILO). In 2002, she became co-director of the Knowledge Networking Program on Engendering Macroeconomics and International Economics (GEM-IWG) and co-founded GEM-Europe and GEM-Turkey.

Academic career

Currently Antonopoulos is Associate Professor of Economics at Bard College she has been affiliated with since 2001. She is also a senior scholar with the associated Levy Economics Institute and director of the Gender Equality and the Economy program. In the last years she has further specialized in linkages of gender and macro economics, in the macroeconomic impact of job guarantee policies, and in the implications of unpaid work on poverty indicators.

In line with the heterodox post-Keynesian framework of Modern Monetary Theory, her concept of a "Job guarantee" which she has been developing at Bard College since 2006 turns the state into an Employer of last resort that issues publicly funded jobs at minimum wage level to everybody unable to find a job in the private sector. The huge rise of unemployment following the Greek government-debt crisis and the austerity measures imposed by the Troika led the PASOK-led Ministry of Labour into giving the concept a chance. In 2012, a first pilot program was rolled out for 55,000 unemployed.

Minister for Combatting Unemployment

When in the January 2015 elections, Antonopoulos was elected a Member of the Hellenic Parliament on Syriza's state list, new Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras appointed her Alternate Minister for Combatting Unemployment. Antonopoulou is the second Modern Monetary Theory scholar to assume a high-profile post in a government, following her former colleague at Bard College, Stephanie Kelton, who earlier in January was appointed Chief Economist of the U.S. Senate Budget Committee.

In her ministerial office, Antonopoulos is specifically tasked with implementing a nationwide "Job guarantee" program to combat long-term unemployment, creating at least 300,000 new jobs for the unemployed. The program has been described both by herself and by others as being a centerpiece of a "Greek New Deal" as proposed by the Syriza government.

Outlined in a Levy Institute policy paper from October 2014, the program will be built on the experience of the 2012 pilot project and won't be restricted to reskilling some of the unemployed for the private sector. The program, with precedents only in the Indian Rural Employment Guarantee, is rather set to create publicly funded long-term jobs to allow the unemployed fulfilling socially needed tasks at a minimum wage level. In a February 2015 interview with Deutsche Welle, Antonopoulos pointed out that "the main problem in Greece is lack of aggregate demand and consequent lack of jobs, not lack of skills." Results of the 2012 pilot project suggested that some 500,000 of the totaling 1.3 million unemployed in Greece would be willing to take up such a minimum-wage level job.

Private life

Antonopoulos lives in Athens and New York City and is married to her colleague at Bard College, Greek American economist Dimitri B. Papadimitriou.

Selected publications

  • "Explaining long term exchange rate behavior in the United States and Japan". Working Papers (250). (with Anwar Shaikh). Levy Economics Institute. September 1998. 
  • "The Unpaid Care Work–Paid Work Connection". Working Papers (86). Geneva: International Labour Office. May 2009. 
  • An Alternative Theory of Long-run Exchange Rate Determination. VDM. 2009. ISBN 978-3639156690. 
  • "The Current Economic and Financial Crisis: A Gender Perspective". Working Paper (562). Levy Economics Institute. May 2009. 
  • Unpaid Work and the Economy: Gender, Time Use and Poverty in Developing Countries. (with Indira Hirway). Palgrave Macmillan. 2009. ISBN 978-0-230-21730-0. 
  • Direct Job Creation for Turbulent Times in Greece (Report). (with Dimitri B. Papadimitriou, Taun Toay). Levy Economics Institute. 30 November 2011. 
  • . (with Dimitri B. Papadimitriou). "Economic Turbulence in Greece". Economic & Political Weekly. XLVII (5). 4 February 2012. 
  • "After Austerity: Measuring the Impact of a Job Guarantee Policy for Greece". Public Policy Brief (138). (with Sofia Adam, Kijong Kim, Thomas Masterson & Dimitri B. Papadimitriou). Levy Economics Institute. 2014. 
  • Gender Perspectives and Gender Impacts of the Global Economic Crisis. (ed.). Routledge. 2014. ISBN 978-0-415-65817-1. 
  • References

    Rania Antonopoulos Wikipedia