Teaching
In addition to standard undergraduate and graduate classes, I regularly teach the following more unusual economics courses.
Econ for Everyone: Macro
Inequality: A Macroeconomic Perspective
Advanced Macroeconomics Reading Group
Monetary and Fiscal Policy with Heterogeneity: A Master Class for Central Bankers and Economists in Policy Institutions
This four-day course is designed to familiarize economists with recent advances in the study of monetary and fiscal policy in the presence of heterogeneity. It is designed for researchers in central banks and other government and non-government agencies who wish to improve their understanding of state-of-the-art tools for incorporating income and wealth distributions into macroeconomic models, and the main policy lessons that have emerged from these models.
A growing literature argues that Heterogeneous Agent New Keynesian (HANK) models offer a useful framework for the analysis of macroeconomic shocks and policies. Advantages over traditional Representative Agent New Keynesian (RANK) models include the ability to study:
new transmission mechanisms for monetary policy;
the impacts of monetary and fiscal policy on wealth and income distributions;
and the conduct of policy in the presence of shocks that cannot be studied in the absence of heterogeneity
Many central banks have access to (or collect themselves) high-quality micro data on household and firm behavior. HANK models also open up the door to bringing this micro data to the table in order to empirically discipline macro theories.
Watch the video overview of the inaugural master class below.