| New Keynesian economics | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1955 (age 56–57) Chicopee, Massachusetts |
| Nationality | |
| Institution | Columbia University |
| Field | Macroeconomics Monetary policy |
| Alma mater | MIT University of Chicago |
| Awards | Deutsche Bank Prize (2007) |
| Information at IDEAS/RePEc | |
Michael Dean Woodford (born 1955, in Chicopee, Massachusetts) is an American macroeconomist and monetary theorist who currently teaches at Columbia University.
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Woodford holds an undergraduate degree from the University of Chicago and a law degree from Yale, and completed his economics doctorate at MIT in 1983.[1] He began his teaching career at Columbia, and then taught at Chicago and Princeton before returning to Columbia to accept the John Bates Clark chair in 2004. He is one of relatively few economists to have been awarded the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Prize Fellowship, which financed his research from 1981 to 1986. In 2007, he was awarded the Deutsche Bank Prize.[2]
Woodford's early research topics included sunspot equilibria[3] and imperfect competition.[4] Thereafter he began to work on macroeconomic models with sticky prices; together with Julio Rotemberg he developed one of the first microfounded New Keynesian macroeconomic models.[5] Since then he has used this framework to study many topics related to monetary policy, including the fiscal theory of the price level,[6] the effectiveness of monetary policy as consumers use more credit and less cash,[7] and inflation targeting rules.[8]
Woodford is probably best known as the author of an advanced textbook on monetary macroeconomics entitled Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy.[9][10] The book has, in the words of the Deutsche Bank Prize Committee, 'quickly become the standard reference for monetary theory and analysis among academic economists and their colleagues at central banks'.[2]
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