Short Biography
A citizen of France, Olivier Blanchard has spent his professional life in
Cambridge, U.S. After obtaining his Ph.D in economics at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in 1977, he taught at Harvard University, returning to
MIT in 1982, where he has been since then. He is currently the Class of 1941
Professor of Economics, and past Chair of the Economics Department.
He
is a macroeconomist, who has worked on a wide set of issues, from the role of
monetary policy, to the nature of speculative bubbles, to the nature of the
labor market and the determinants of unemployment, to transition in former
communist countries. In the process, he has worked with numerous countries and
international organizations. He is the author of many books and articles,
including two textbooks in macroeconomics, one at the graduate level with
Stanley Fischer, one at the undergraduate level.
He is a fellow and
Council member of the Econometric Society, a past vice president of the American
Economic Association, a member of the American Academy of Sciences, and a member
of the French Economic Advisory Council to the French Prime Minister.