Topics View All
Geography View All
Content Type View All
Trending:
Research Activities
General Information
Director, The Hamilton Project | Senior Fellow, Economic Studies
Hamilton Project Director Michael Greenstone at a Brookings event.
Michael Greenstone is the 3M Professor of Environmental Economics in the Department of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From 2009-10 he served as the chief economist at the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers. His research is focused on estimating the costs and benefits of environmental quality and the consequences of government regulation. | View Full Bio
Refine by: U.S. Economic Performance | Job Creation | Unemployment | Energy
Blog Post
May 3, 2013 | comments
April 12, 2013 | comments
April 5, 2013 | comments
Past Event
February 26, 2013
February 22, 2013
Podcast
February 20, 2013
February 20, 2013 | comments
February 1, 2013 | comments
January 29, 2013 | comments
Blog Post | The Hamilton Project
January 4, 2013 | comments
View All Research by Michael ›Show 10 More
Email Michael Greenstone Contact Michael Greenstone Send a question or comment using the form below. All fields are required. This message may be routed through support staff. Your Email Address Email required. Subject Subject required. Body Body required. | Cancel
Send a question or comment using the form below. All fields are required. This message may be routed through support staff.
Email Michael Greenstone
202-797-6082 — Communications Coordinator: Lindsey UnderwoodBrookings Institution
202.797.6105 — Brookings Office of CommunicationsBrookings Institution
Hi-Res Photo
397 KB
Expert CV
33 KB
Current Positions
Past Positions
Get Updates
"An important long-term issue is that men are not doing as well as women in keeping up with the demands of the global economy. It's a first-order mystery for social scientists, why women have more clearly heard the message that the economy has changed and men have such a hard time hearing it or responding."
Source: New York Times
Visit Michael Greenstone's Hamilton Project author page for more research on employment, wages, and energy economics.
Topics