Lucrezia Reichlin is Professor of Economics at the London Business School, non-executive director of AGEAS Insurance Group as well as Chairman & co-founder of Now-Casting Economics Ltd and a Trustee of IFRS. She is a columnist for the Italian national daily Il Corriere della Sera and a regular contributor of Project Syndicate.
Biographie
Lucrezia Reichlin is Professor of Economics at the London Business School, non-executive director of AGEAS Insurance Group as well as Chairman & co-founder of Now-Casting Economics Ltd and a Trustee of IFRS. She is a columnist for the Italian national daily Il Corriere della Sera and a regular contributor of Project Syndicate.
Reichlin received a Ph.D. in Economics from New York University. From 2005 to 2008 she was the Director General of Research at the European Central Bank. From 2009 to 2018 she was non-executive director of UniCredit Banking Group and from 2016 to 2019 she was non-executive director of Eurobank Ergasias SA. From 2013 to 2016 she was Chair of the Scientific Council at the think-tank Bruegel. She is a Fellow of the Econometric Society and the European Economic Association. She is on the advisory board of several research and policy institutions around the world.
Reichlin has been an active contributor to the life of the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). She was research director in 2011-2013, first Chairman of the CEPR Euro Area Business Cycle Dating Committee, co-founder and scientist in charge of the Euro Area Business Cycle Network, and she is now a trustee.
Reichlin has published numerous papers on econometrics and macroeconomics. She is an expert on forecasting, business cycle analysis and monetary policy. She pioneered now-casting in economics by developing econometrics methods capable of reading the real time data flow through the lenses of a formal econometric model. These methods are now widely used by central banks and private investors around the world.
Évènements associés
de 18h00 à 19h00
Debating Economic Policy in the Interregnum
On Thursday, April 28th, the GEG Weekly Seminar will discuss how the US and Europe have fared differently when faced with the economic upheavals of the pandemic and...