wiiw Global Economy Lecture Series

   
     
Marginalbild
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Wing Thye Woo, University of California at Davis
  China's Economic Growth and the Global Economy: Structural Obstacles to Policymaking and Exchange Rate Adjustment
Lecture jointly organized by Oesterreichische Nationalbank (OeNB)
and wiiw, 5 April 2005, 4 p.m.
Venue: Oesterreichische Nationalbank, Vienna 9,
Otto-Wagner-Platz 3, OeNB Auditorium (ground floor)
 
Wing Thye Woo is Professor at the Department of Economics, University of California at Davis. He is Special Advisor for East Asian Economics in the Millennium Project of the United Nations and Director of the East Asia Program within the Center for Globalization and Sustainable Development at Columbia University. Wing Thye Woo was a member of the Consultant Team to China's Ministry of Finance that helped to design the tax and exchange rate reform implemented in January 1994. During 1997-1998 he served as a special advisor to the US Treasury. He founded the Asian Economic Panel (AEP) as a joint venture of Harvard University, Keio University and the Korea Institute for International Economic Policy - a forum of about 50 leading specialists on Asian economies which meets twice a year to discuss economic issues that are of particular importance to Asia. Wing Thye Woo is presently Editor of the Asian Economic Papers and the Journal of Chinese Economic and Business Studies, and Associate Editor of Economics of Planning and the Asian Economic Journal. He is also a member of the editorial advisory boards of various other economic journals on Asia and China in particular. He was President of the Chinese Economists Association of North America (2001-2002) and Vice-President of the Chinese Economists Society (2000-2001 and 2002-2003), and is now a member of the Executive Council of the American Association for Chinese Studies.

Wing Thye Woo has published over 100 articles in professional economic journals and books on topics including exchange rate economics and current accounts, technological innovation and competitiveness, economic management in Asia, and competing interpretations of China's growth mechanisms. His article 'The Monetary Approach to Exchange Rate Determination under Rational Expectations: The Dollar-Deutschemark Case', Journal of International Economics (JIE), February 1985, was identified by JIE in 2000 to be one of the twenty-five most cited articles in its 30 years of history. His current research focuses on international financial architecture, economic growth, exchange rate economics, and the economic development of East Asia (particularly China and Indonesia).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 


 
 


 
 


 
    top
last update: January 2007
 

 
 

 
 

 
Contact
Products & Services : Seminars / Lectures > Global Economy Lecture