Time: 6:00 - 7:00pm Venue: David Sizer Lecture Theatre, Bancroft Building, Mile End Campus, Queen, Mary, University of London, London, E1 4NS
There will be a short talk from Professor John Driffill of Birkbeck who will reflect on some of the themes and ideas of the book in the light of his own thinking on monetary economics developed in the course of a distinguished academic career.
***This event will be followed by a drinks reception from 6.30pm***
John Driffill is a professor of economics at Birkbeck, University of London, specialising in international macroeconomics and labour economics. He is the creator of the Calmfors-Driffill hypothesis. John Driffill has been a professor of economics at Birkbeck College, University of London, since 1999, before which he held academic positions at the University of Southampton, Queen Mary College (University of London), and Tilburg University in the Netherlands. He has enjoyed many visiting posts, including at Queen’s University, Canada; Stockholm University; the Bank of England, where he held a Houblon-Norman fellowship in 1986; Aarhus University (Denmark); the University of Tokyo; the University of Paris; and the University of Pavia (Italy).
He was educated at the University of Cambridge, where he studied natural sciences and then economics, and at Princeton University, where he took a PhD in 1977. He has published numerous articles in scholarly journals on macroeconomics and monetary policy, and on the effects of alternative wage bargaining structures. He also edited A Currency for Europe (1991) with Massimo Beber and The Role of Financial Markets in the Transition Process (2003) with Emilio Colombo. In 2000 he published (with Joseph E. Stiglitz) an adaptation, for a British and European readership, of Stiglitz’s introductory textbook Economics.
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For any event queries: Please contact a.alele@qmul.ac.uk