Crédibilité et discipline monétaire
Règle ou discrétion ? Cette question est au cœur de la théorie moderne des banques centrales. Ce débat, qui prît sa véritable dimension après la parution de la Théorie Générale de J. M. Keynes, a évolué au fil du temps. Les réponses qu'on voulait lui apporter ont amené de nouvelles questions. Les outils élaborés pour le résoudre se sont avérés être autant de nouvelles directions de recherche. D’ailleurs, deux des mentors de la théorie moderne viennent juste de recevoir le Prix Nobel d’Economie (2004).
Les enjeux sont énormes : la question crédibilité de la Banque centrale européenne, l’avenir du dollar américain, sans oublier la question de la prochaine monnaie internationale ?
Éditeur : | Editions Le Manuscrit | Langue : | français |
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Genre : | Sciences économiques | Sortie : | 15 mars 2006 |
Sous-genre : | Général | Collection : | économie |
Biographie
Thierry Warin
Visiting Scholar at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs (Harvard University, 2015-2017) and Microeconomics of Competitiveness (MOC) Network Faculty Affiliate (ISC, Harvard Business School, 2016-), I am Associate Professor of International Business at HEC Montréal and Principal Investigator of the Social Data Science Lab at CIRANO (Canada). I am also Researcher at CERIUM-CEUE (University of Montreal). I was Associate Professor at Polytechnique Montreal (Director of the International Projects Program), Associate Professor at Middlebury College (Director of the International Studies and IPE program) and Academic Director at SIE-Sun Yat Sen University in Guangzhou (China). As Principal Investigator for the Social Data Science Lab at Cirano, I organize, co-organize, or support bi-weekly luncheons, seminars and one or more international conferences or workshops every year (i.e. Central Banking and Supervision, Too Big To Fail Conference, International Trade and Finance Annual Conference, Networks in Trade and Finance Annual Conference, Myths and Realities about the BRICS). I have authored numerous academic publications and books or special issues.
An alumnus of the Salzburg Global Seminar, I held positions in several academic institutions (Middlebury College USA, Polytechnique Montreal, Sun Yat Sen University Guangzhou, Essec Business School Paris, HEC Paris, La Sorbonne, UIBE Beijing). My research is mainly on international economics and finance topics, with a particular focus on the European economic integration. My methodology of choice is Data Science, with a particular focus on high-power computing-based Econometrics.
An alumnus of the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard University, I completed my PhD in Monetary Economics and Finance at Essec Business School in Paris.