Richard Baldwin
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Affiliation: Graduate Institute, Geneva and CEPR Home Page: http://graduateinstitute.ch/ctei/home/ctei_people/baldwin_home.html Richard Edward Baldwin is Professor of International Economics at the Graduate Institute, Geneva since 1991, Policy Director of CEPR since 2006, and Editor-in-Chief of Vox since he founded it in June 2007. He was Co-managing Editor of the journal Economic Policy from 2000 to 2005, and Programme Director of CEPR’s International Trade programme from 1991 to 2001. Before that he was a Senior Staff Economist for the President's Council of Economic Advisors in the Bush Administration (1990-1991), on leave from Columbia University Business School where he was Associate Professor. He did his PhD in economics at MIT with Paul Krugman. He was visiting professor at MIT in 2002/03 and has taught at universities in Italy, Germany and Norway. He has also worked as consultant for the numerous governments, the European Commission, OECD, World Bank, EFTA, and USAID. The author of numerous books and articles, his research interests include international trade, globalisation, regionalism, and European integration. He is a CEPR Research Fellow.
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Recent articles by Richard Baldwin 
- Contagious FTAs: New evidence on the domino theory of regionalism
- Introducing a free database of nearly all jobs for PhD economists
- New eBook: Completing the Eurozone rescue: What more needs to be done?
- Completing the Eurozone rescue: What more needs to be done?
- Sources of the WTO’s woes: Decision-making’s impossible trinity
- Understanding the GATT’s wins and the WTO’s woes
- Eurozone crisis: What Vox columnists said
- Buiter’s warning: Who is the recapitaliser of last resort for the ECB?
- Thinking clearly about offshoring
- Welcome to Nada Es Gratis, our new Consortium partner
- How to destroy the Eurozone: Feldstein’s euro-holiday idea
- The great trade collapse: What caused it and what does it mean?
- The Great Trade Collapse: Causes, Consequences and Prospects
- The great trade collapse: Presenting the new ebook
- The great trade collapse and trade imbalances
- The illusion of improving global imbalances
- Calomiris on historical crisis lessons
- ebook views
- How many jobs are onshorable?
- Trade and the London Summit outcome
- Developing nations and capital flows: The IMF's new facility
- The collapse of global trade, murky protectionism, and the crisis: Recommendations for the G20
- Don't let murky protectionism stall a global recovery: Things the G20 should do
- Progress report: Vox’s Global Crisis Debate
- The IMF on fiscal policy in the crisis
- Restoring the G20's credibility on trade: Plan B and the WTO trade talks
- What world leaders should do to halt the spread of protectionism
- The crisis and protectionism: Steps world leaders should take
- What the G20 should do on November 15th to fix the financial system
- What G20 leaders must do to stabilise our economy and fix the financial system
- Rescuing our jobs and savings: What G7/8 leaders can do to solve the global credit crisis
- Rescuing our jobs and savings: What G7/8 leaders can do to solve the global credit crisis
- Rescuing our jobs and savings: What G7/8 leaders can do to solve the global credit crisis
- Open Letter to European leaders on Europe’s banking crisis: A call to action
- Making globalisation work: skills, families, unions and the welfare state
- The WTO tipping point
- Vox is one year old
- Wine economics and economical wine
- Is smoking “contagious”?
- Can we multilateralise regionalism?
- Aging and death on a dollar a day
- Feldstein’s view on the dollar
- Krugman’s view on the dollar
- Economic policy discussion on the web
- Poland won
- VAT fraud part 5
- Voting rules matter: Poland’s cause
- VAT fraud part 4
- VAT fraud part 3
- Pandora’s (ballot) box
- VAT fraud part 2
- Poland's square-root-ness
- VAT fraud part 1
- The new treaty: economist’s perspective, part 4
- The new treaty: economist’s perspective, part 3
- The new treaty: economist’s perspective, part 2
- The new treaty: economist’s perspective, part 1
- Is enlargement unlimited?
- Is a new treaty needed?
- In or out: does it matter? An evidence-based analysis of the euro's trade effects
- Treaty of Rome at 50
- Does the EU need a new treaty?
- The royalty of CAP madness
- Constitutional treaty fallacies
- Plan B for the EU constitution
- 149884 reads
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