Codirectors
Mark Gertler is the Henry and Lucy Moses Professor of Economics at New York University. His research ranges widely within macroeconomics, touching on business cycles, monetary economics, and the links between the financial and real sectors of the economy. He has been an NBER affiliate since 1986.
Pete Klenow is the Ralph Landau Professor in Economic Policy at Stanford University, and the Gordon Moore Senior Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. His research interests center on macroeconomics and productivity analysis. He has been an NBER affiliate since 1997.
Featured Program Content
In Why Didn’t the US Unemployment Rate Rise at the End of WWII? (NBER Working Paper 33041), Shigeru Fujita, Valerie A. Ramey, and Tal Roded investigate why the...
Since World War II, the Federal Reserve’s most effective campaigns against inflation have been characterized by clear-cut goals, a willingness to accept...
In People’s Understanding of Inflation (NBER Working Paper 32497), Alberto Binetti, Francesco Nuzzi, and Stefanie Stantcheva present new survey results on the...