Kristin Forbes Honorary CBE | |
---|---|
External Member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee | |
In office July 2014 –June 2017 | |
Governor | Mark Carney |
Preceded by | Ben Broadbent |
Succeeded by | Silvana Tenreyro |
Member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers | |
In office May 2003 –June 2005 | |
President | George W. Bush |
Preceded by | Randall Kroszner |
Succeeded by | Matthew J. Slaughter Katherine Baicker |
Personal details | |
Born | Concord,New Hampshire,U.S. | 21 August 1970
Spouse | Steve Calhoun |
Alma mater |
|
Academic career | |
Field | Macroeconomics International economics Monetary economics |
Institution | |
Doctoral advisor | Rudi Dornbusch • Paul Krugman • Jaume Ventura |
Awards | NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program Ford Foundation Fellowship Michael Brennan Award |
Information at IDEAS / RePEc | |
Kristin J. Forbes (born August 21, 1970) [1] is an American macroeconomist and policy adviser currently serving as the Jerome and Dorothy Lemelson Professor of Management and Global Economics at the MIT Sloan School of Management. [2] She was formerly a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, and an external member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England. [2] Forbes' research focuses on international macroeconomics, monetary economics, and macroprudential policy. [2] Alongside her academic appointments, she sits on advisory boards to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, International Monetary Fund, and Bank for International Settlements. [2] Forbes is also the convener of the Bellagio Group, as of 2020. [3]
Forbes was born on August 21, 1970, in Concord, New Hampshire, the eldest of three children. [1] Her father was an orthopedist, and her mother was a stay-at-home mom. [1] [4] Forbes attended Concord High School and in 1988 was selected as a Presidential Scholar, earning a trip to Washington, D.C. to meet President Ronald Reagan in the White House Rose Garden. [1] [5]
After graduating from high school, Forbes enrolled at Williams College, taking first-year courses in astrophysics, economics, religion, and psychology. [1] [5] She chose economics as her major, crediting Morton O. Schapiro for inspiring her interest in the subject. [5] [6] She graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1992, receiving a BA in economics [1] [5] and winning the David Wells prize for best undergraduate thesis. [7]
After completing her undergraduate studies, Forbes joined the investment banking division of Morgan Stanley as an analyst. [5] After one year at the bank, Dick Sabot put Forbes in touch with Nancy Birdsall at the World Bank, who hired her for a project examining the determinants of economic growth in Latin America. [5] The role inspired an interest in macroeconomics, encouraging Forbes to pursue a PhD and a career in economic policy. [5] She pursued graduate studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where her dissertation research was supervised by Paul Krugman, Rudi Dornbusch, and Jaume Ventura and was supported by the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program. [7] During her studies, Forbes spent three months traveling in India, and pursued research on financial contagion and the relationship between inequality and economic growth. [5] She received her PhD in 1998, winning the Robert Solow prize for excellence in research and teaching. [7]
In 1998, Forbes joined the MIT Sloan School of Management as assistant professor of economics, gaining tenure in 2004. In 2009, she became the Jerome and Dorothy Lemelson professor of management and global economics at MIT. [2] Alongside her academic appointment, Forbes is an affiliate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and Center for Economic and Policy Research, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. [2] She also formerly served on the editorial board of the American Economic Journal: Economic Policy. [7]
Forbes accepted her first policy position in 2001, when John B. Taylor recruited her to become Deputy Assistant Secretary of Quantitative Policy Analysis for the Latin American and Caribbean Nations at the United States Department of the Treasury. [1] Her role focused on financial stability in Latin America. [1] After returning to MIT, Forbes was recruited by Gregory Mankiw to join the Council of Economic Advisers of George W. Bush, [1] where she became the youngest person in history to hold her position. [8] As a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, Forbes focused on the economic ascendance of China, where she voiced her belief that workers in other Asian countries would be more impacted by China's rise than those in the United States. She left the CEA in 2005, returning to her academic position. [1]
In 2014, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne appointed Forbes to be an external member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England, [9] replacing Ben Broadbent, who was promoted to Deputy Governor of Monetary Policy. [10] She became the second woman on the nine-person Monetary Policy Committee, joining Minouche Shafik, formerly of the International Monetary Fund. [9]
At the Bank of England, Forbes became a vocal dissenter, with commentators labelling her both a monetary policy "dove" and "hawk" at different points in her tenure. In the early months of her position, Forbes advocated against interest rises, arguing that insufficient information was available on whether inflationary pressures in the UK were being masked by the strengthening of the Pound sterling, and the corresponding fall in import prices. [11] She discussed this tradeoff in her first public speech as a Monetary Policy Committee member, delivered at an event at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.
In later years, Forbes would become an advocate for interest rate rises, arguing that pessimism about the state of the global economy was overstated. [12] In November 2014, she emphasized that she placed "slightly more probability on the risk that the global economy could be somewhat stronger than in our baseline forecast", a stance that placed her on the hawkish wing of the nine-member committee. [12] Despite these views, Forbes would continue to vote against rate rises at most subsequent meetings. [13] In August 2016, she joined a unanimous majority of the Monetary Policy Committee to lower rates from 0.5% to 0.25% in response to the 2016 Brexit referendum. [14]
In the months after this vote, Forbes emphasized in public statements that uncertainty created by Brexit was less of a drag on growth than was previously expected, [15] and advocated against further monetary stimulus and rate cuts. [16] In June 2017, Forbes joined Ian McCafferty and Michael Saunders to vote in favor of an interest rate increase, bringing the Bank of England closer to a rate increase than any time since 2007. [17] The 5–3 vote was a surprise to analysts, and led to a sharp increase in the value of the Pound. [17]
Forbes left the Bank of England in June 2017, returning to her post at MIT. [18] She was replaced by Silvana Tenreyro, a professor of economics at the London School of Economics. [19] In leaving her role, Forbes criticized the Bank of England and other central banks, arguing that the high public profile of central bankers discouraged aggressive action against inflation. [20] She also argued that an overload of work for senior economists discouraged deviations from baseline models and analysis. [20] Mark Carney, then-Governor of the Bank of England, emphasized that Forbes provided "insight, fresh-thinking and academic rigour to our [the Bank of England's] deliberations, as well as a fresh and engaging approach to communications." [18]
Alongside her policy positions, Forbes pursues research on international macroeconomics and monetary economics. [2] According to Research Papers in Economics, she is among the most productive economists in the world, ranking within the top 65 female economists by research output. [21]
Monetary policy is the policy adopted by the monetary authority of a nation to affect monetary and other financial conditions to accomplish broader objectives like high employment and price stability. Further purposes of a monetary policy may be to contribute to economic stability or to maintain predictable exchange rates with other currencies. Today most central banks in developed countries conduct their monetary policy within an inflation targeting framework, whereas the monetary policies of most developing countries' central banks target some kind of a fixed exchange rate system. A third monetary policy strategy, targeting the money supply, was widely followed during the 1980s, but has diminished in popularity since then, though it is still the official strategy in a number of emerging economies.
The Taylor rule is a monetary policy targeting rule. The rule was proposed in 1992 by American economist John B. Taylor for central banks to use to stabilize economic activity by appropriately setting short-term interest rates. The rule considers the federal funds rate, the price level and changes in real income. The Taylor rule computes the optimal federal funds rate based on the gap between the desired (targeted) inflation rate and the actual inflation rate; and the output gap between the actual and natural output level. According to Taylor, monetary policy is stabilizing when the nominal interest rate is higher/lower than the increase/decrease in inflation. Thus the Taylor rule prescribes a relatively high interest rate when actual inflation is higher than the inflation target.
David Kenneth Miles is a British economist. Born in Swansea, he has spent his working life in London, in teaching, business and the public sector. He is a professor at Imperial College London, and was Chief UK Economist of Morgan Stanley bank from October 2004 to May 2009. He was appointed to the Bank of England's interest-rate-setting Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) from 1 June 2009 to June 2012 and again from June 2012 to 31 August 2015, before being replaced by Gertjan Vlieghe. According to the Bank of England, "As an economist he has focused on the interaction between financial markets and the wider economy.". In December 2020 he was appointed to the main board of the central Bank of Ireland. He was appointed to the Budget Responsibility Committee of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) in December 2021. He took up that role in January 2022.
Alan Stuart Blinder is an American economics professor at Princeton University and is listed among the most influential economists in the world. He is a leading macro-economist, politically liberal, and a champion of Keynesian economics and policies.
John Brian Taylor is the Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics at Stanford University, and the George P. Shultz Senior Fellow in Economics at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.
Marian Patricia Bell, CBE is a British consultant economist, and was a member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee from June 2002 to June 2005.
Andrew SentanceCBE is a British business economist. He was a Senior Adviser to Cambridge Econometrics from October 2019 to September 2023. From November 2011 until October 2018, he was Senior Economic Adviser to PwC. He was an external member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England from October 2006 to May 2011 and is a former Chief Economist at British Airways and Director of Economic Affairs at the CBI.
Charles L. Evans is the former ninth president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, serving from 2007 to 2023. In that capacity, he served on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Federal Reserve System's monetary policy-making body.
The Bernacer Prize is awarded annually to European young economists who have made outstanding contributions in the fields of macroeconomics and finance. The prize is named after Germán Bernácer, an early Spanish macroeconomist.
William R. White is a Canadian economist who was the chairman of the Economic and Development Review Committee at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) from 2009 to 2018. He is famous for flagging the wild behaviour in the debt markets before the global storm hit in 2008. In 2009, Dirk Bezemer, a Professor of Economics at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, noted that White was one of the earliest to have predicted the 2007–2008 financial crisis.
David Hibbard Romer is an American economist, the Herman Royer Professor of Political Economy at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of a standard textbook in graduate macroeconomics as well as many influential economic papers, particularly in the area of New Keynesian economics. He is also the husband and close collaborator of Council of Economic Advisers former Chairwoman Christina Romer.
Monika Piazzesi received her PhD in economics at Stanford University. She was a recipient of the Deutsche Studienstiftung ERP (1997–2000). She has been the Joan Kenney Professor of Economics at Stanford University since 2010. She is also a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. In 2005, when she was an assistant professor at the University of Chicago Business School, she received the Germán Bernácer Prize. She subsequently won the Elaine Bennett Research Prize. Her research focuses on asset pricing and time series econometrics, especially related to bond markets and the term structure of interest rates. She has published papers related to housing issues, asset prices and quantities, bond markets, interest rate and GDP. In 2023, she was elected to the National Academy of Sciences.
Stephen G Cecchetti is an American economist who has been the Barbara and Richard M Rosenberg Professor of Global Finance at Brandeis International Business School. His principal fields of interest are macroeconomics, monetary economics, financial economics, monetary policy, central banking, and the supply of money.
Jagjit Singh Chadha (Punjabi: ਜਗਜੀਤ ਸਿੰਘ ਚਢਾ, born 1 December 1966 in West Yorkshire is a British economist who is the Director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research.
David I. Meiselman was an American economist. Among his contributions to the field of economics are his work on the term structure of interest rates, the foundation today of the implementation of monetary policy by major central banks, and his work with Milton Friedman on the impact of monetary policy on the performance of the economy and inflation.
Alicia Garcia Herrero is a Spanish economist and academic based in Hong Kong. She has been the chief economist for Asia-Pacific at French investment bank Natixis and adjunct Professor at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) since June 2015. She is also an adjunct professor at Sunyatsen University and has recently joined insurance company AGEAS as an independent board member.
Stephanie Schmitt-Grohé is a German economist who has been a professor of economics at Columbia University since 2008. Her research focuses on macroeconomics, fiscal policy, and monetary policy in open and closed economies. In 2004, she was awarded the Bernácer Prize, for her research on monetary stabilization policies.
Danae Kyriakopoulou is a Greek economist who is currently the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF)'s Chief Economist and Director of Research. Kyriakopoulou is the head of OMFIF's economic staff, providing leadership and direction in the economic research agenda. She is fluent in English, German, Greek, and Spanish. Kyriakopoulou is a macroeconomist who often is asked to speaker and contributor for international publications, conferences and the media.
Luisa Lambertini is an Italian economist specializing in monetary and fiscal policies. She is a professor of economics at EPFL, where she holds the Chair of International Finance at the College of Management of Technology.
The Bellagio Group is a group of international economists, senior central bankers and Treasury officials who meet annually to discuss international economic and financial issues.