Sunday February 12, 2012

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Senior Fellow

Martin Neil Baily

Martin Neil Baily

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies
Bernard L. Schwartz Chair in Economic Policy Development

Martin Baily, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton administration (1999–2001) and one of three members of the council from 1994 to 1996, focuses on issues of globalization, productivity and competitiveness, Social Security reform, and U.S. economic policy.



Expertise

Competitiveness; globalization; productivity; Social Security; U.S. economic policy                    

Background

Current Positions
Senior Advisor, McKinsey & Company’s Global Institute; Member, Board of The Phoenix Companies, Inc.

Past Positions
Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics (2001-2007); Chairman, Council of Economic Advisers (1999–2001); Member, Council of Economic Advisers (1994 to 1996); Principal, McKinsey & Company’s Global Institute (1996–99); Professor of Economics, University of Maryland (1989–96); Vice Chairman, National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council; Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research; Associate Editor, Journal of Economic Perspectives

Education

Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Research and Commentary


Save to My PortfolioThe State of American Small BusinessFebruary 01, 2012House Committee on Small Business
Save to My PortfolioThe U.S. Economy: Is it Finally Recovering?December 13, 2011The Brookings Institution
Save to My PortfolioTo Fix Housing, Fix FinanceOctober 06, 2011The Wall Street Journal
Save to My PortfolioCan Natural Disasters Help Stimulate the Economy?September 01, 2011The International Economy Magazine
Save to My PortfolioAround the Halls: Advice for Obama's CEO SummitDecember 14, 2010Brookings Up Front Blog
Save to My PortfolioThe Danger of Divergence: Transatlantic Cooperation on Financial ReformOctober 07, 2010Atlantic Council-Thomson Reuters
Save to My PortfolioThe Next Economy and the Growth Challenge for the United StatesSeptember 30, 2010The Brookings Institution
Save to My PortfolioThe Global Jobs Competition Heats UpJuly 01, 2010Wall Street Journal

More Research and Commentary »

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