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John B. Taylor is the Bowen H. and Janice Arthur McCoy Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics at Stanford University. He has served as the director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and was founding director of Stanford's Introductory Economics Center. Taylor's fields of expertise are monetary policy, fiscal policy, and international economics. He has an active interest in public policy. Taylor is currently a member of the California Governor's Council of Economic Advisors, where he also previously served from 1996 to 1998. In the past, he served as senior economist on President Ford's Council of Economic Advisers in 1976, as a member of President Bush's Council of Economic Advisers from 1989 through 1991, as economic adviser to the Bob Dole presidential campaign in 1996, and as economic adviser to the George W. Bush presidential campaign in 2000. |
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Professor White has been with NYU Stern for more than 30 years. His primary research areas of interest include financial regulation, antitrust, network industries, international banking and applied microeconomics. He has published numerous articles in the Journal of Business, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Journal of Political Economy, American Economic Review, Review of Economics and Statistics, and Quarterly Journal of Economics. He is the author of The S&L Debacle: Public Policy Lessons for Bank and Thrift Regulation, among other books and he is the co-editor (with John Kwoka) of The Antitrust Revolution, 5th edition, which was published in 2008 |
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