研究者紹介

清滝 信宏

清滝 信宏

Nobuhiro Kiyotaki

International Senior Fellow

Professor, Department of Economics, Princeton University

研究分野

  • Macroeconomics

プロフィール

学歴

1981-1985 Harvard University, Ph.D. Economics, June 1985.
1978-1981 University of Tokyo, Ph.D. Program
1974-1978 University of Tokyo, B.A. Economics, March 1978

職歴

2006-Present Professor, Department of Economics, Princeton University.
2006-Present Academic Consultant, Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
1997-2006 Professor, Department of Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science.
1991-1997 Associate Professor, Department of Economics, University of Minnesota.
1989-1991 Lecturer, Department of Economics, London School of Economics and Political Science.
1985-1991 Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

著作物

  • "The Great Escape?" with Marco Del Negro, Gauti Eggertsson and Andrea Ferrero, in American Economic Review (2017), 107(3), 824-857.
  • ”Banking, Liquidity, and Bank Runs in an Infinite Horizon Economy、" with Mark Gertler in American Economic Review (2015), 2011-2043.
  • "Financial Intermediation and Credit Policy in Business Cycle Analysis," with Mark Gertler, in Handbook of Monetary Economics, Volume 3A, edited by Benjamin Friedman and Michael Woodford, Amsterdam: Elsevier (2010).
  • "A Model of Job and Worker Flow," with Ricardo Lagos, in Journal of Political Economy (2007), 770-819.
  • "Liquidity and Asset Prices," with John Moore, in International Economic Review, (2005), 317-349.
  • "Credit Cycles," with John Moore, Journal of Political Economy, (1997), 211-248.
  • "Towards a Theory of International Currency," with Kiminori Matsuyama and Aki- hiko Matsui, Review of Economic Studies, (1993), 283-307.
  • "On Money as a Medium of Exchange," with Randall Wright, Journal of Political Economy, (1989), 927-54.
  • "Monopolistic Competition and the E¤ects of Aggregate Demand," with Olivier Blanchard, American Economic Review, (1987), 647-66.
  • "Liquidity, Business Cycles and Monetary Policy," with John Moore, in Journal of Political Economy (2019): 2926-2966.