May 2014
by Tara M. Sinclair (The George Washington University), Jeff Messina (The George Washington University) and Herman Stekler (The George Washington University)
Institute for International Economic Policy (IIEP)
At the Elliott School of International Affairs
May 2014
by Tara M. Sinclair (The George Washington University), Jeff Messina (The George Washington University) and Herman Stekler (The George Washington University)
May 2014
by Luis Catão (IMF), Ana Fostel (George Washington University), and Romain Ranciere (IMF)
May 2014
by Maggie X. Chen (The George Washington University) and Cathy Ge Bao (The George Washington University)
April 2014
by Laura Alfaro (Harvard Business School) and Maggie Chen (George Washington University)
April 2014
byChao Wei (The George Washington University) and Shanjun Lei (Cornell University)
Elliott School of International Affairs
Lindner Family Commons, 6th Floor
1957 E St. NW
Washington D.C. 20052
The Washington Area International Trade Symposium (WAITS) is a forum that highlights trade research at institutions in the Washington D.C. area. Its primary activity is sponsoring an annual research conference where scholars present their latest academic work. Researchers from George Washington University, American University, the Census Bureau, the Federal Reserve Board, Georgetown University, the Inter-American Development Bank, Johns Hopkins University (SAIS), the U.S. International Trade Commission, the University of Maryland, and the World Bank have all participated in the symposium.
Contact iiep@gwu.edu with any questions.
George Washington University’s Institute for International Economic Policy, housed at the Elliott School of International Affairs, is dedicated to producing and disseminating high-quality non-partisan academic and policy relevant research on international economic policy. Areas of focus include international trade, international finance, and development economics.
by Stephen B. Kaplan (George Washington University) and Kaj Thomsson (Maastricht University)
February 2014
by Sarah Baird (George Washington University), J. Aislinn Bohren (University of Pennsylvania), Craig McIntosh (University of California, San Diego) and Berk Ozler (World Bank and University of Otago)
January 2014
by Tara M. Sinclair (The George Washington University) and Amy Y. Guisinger (The George Washington University)
January 2014
by Rémi Jedwab (George Washington University), Luc Christiaensen(Development Research Group, The World Bank), and Marina Gindelsky(George Washington University)
January 2014
by Rémi Jedwab (George Washington University) and Alexander Moradi(University of Sussex)
January 2014
by Rémi Jedwab (George Washington University), Edward Kerby(London School of Economics and Political Science), and Alexander Moradi(University of Sussex)
Lindner Commons, Suite 602
Elliott School of International Affairs
1957 E St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20052
The U.S.-China relationship is now second to none in importance for international economic relations and policy and accordingly is a major focus of IIEP. The centerpiece of this initiative is our annual Conference on China’s Economic Development and U.S.-China Economic and Political Relations (or the “G2 at GW”), which as become one of the premier events of its type.
Moderated by Michael Moore
Moderated by Maggie Chen
Moderated by Jay Shambaugh
Moderated by Stephen Smith
An archive of all previous Annual Conferences on China’s Economic Development and U.S.-China Economic Relations is available here.
For more information, please contact Kyle Renner at iiep@gwu.edu or 202-994-5320.
Co-sponsored by:
October 2013
Rémi Jedwab (George Washington University), Douglas Gollin(University of Oxford) and Dietrich Vollrath (University of Houston)
by Tara Sinclair (co-author Julia Bersch)
August 2013
by Claudia Berg (George Washington University), M. Shahe Emran (IDP, Columbua University) and Forhad Shilpi (World Bank)
June 2013
by Ana Fostel (George Washington University) and John Geanakoplos (Yale University)
July 2013
by Susan Ariel Aaronson (Department of Economics, GWU), and Ian Higham (London School of Economics)
June 2013
by Laura Alfaro (Harvard Business School) and Maggie Chen (George Washington University)
June 2013
by Laura Alfaro (Harvard Business School) and Maggie Chen (George Washington University)
May 2013
by Ana Fostel (George Washington University) and John Geanakoplos (Yale University)
View the conference schedule and agenda here
April 2013
by Steve Charnovitz (George Washington University) and Bernard Hoekman (World Bank)
Elliott School of International Affairs
Room 212
1957 E St. NW
Washington D.C. 20052
The Washington Area Development Economics Symposium (WADES) is an annual research conference which highlights academic work from researchers at leading economics institutions in development economics in the Washington DC area. Researchers from George Washington University, University of Maryland, Georgetown University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Virginia, the World Bank, the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), American University, George Mason University, and the Center for Global Development are all participants in the symposium.
Contact iiep@gwu.edu with any questions.
Download the conference schedule here.
George Washington University’s Institute for International Economic Policy, housed at the Elliott School of International Affairs, is dedicated to producing and disseminating high-quality non-partisan academic and policy relevant research on international economic policy. Areas of focus include international trade, international finance, and development economics.
by Daniel C. Esty (Yale Law School) and Steve Charnovitz (George Washington University)
by Paul Carrillo (co-author Arun Malik and Jiseon Yoo (IIEP and GWU)
March 2013
by Michael D. Bradley (Department of Economics, GWU), Dennis W. Jansen Department of Economics (Texas A and M University), and Tara M. Sinclair (GWU)
March 2013
by Gabriela Aparicio (co-author Paul E. Carrillo (GWU) and M. Shahe Emran (IPD, Columbia University)
On January 31, The New York Times, America’s paper of record, made front page news. Several months after it published several articles delineating the financial holdings of the families of Chinese leaders, the Times reported that the Chinese military had hacked into its computers, inserted malware and stolen its employees’ e-mail account passwords. Soon thereafter, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Bloomberg, Voice of America and other media outlets publicly claimed their computers were also allegedly hacked by Chinese citizens.
Many Americans were outraged and expressed concerns about the importance of cyber-security for the fourth estate, which must protect the privacy of sources, ensure freedom of the press, and play such an important role in American democracy. But the incidents also raised questions of governance. How should the US respond to such cyber-attacks when it too is attacking? Congressman Mike Rodgers, Chair of the House Intelligence Committee, called for retaliation. However, retaliation is unlikely to build greater support for shared international cyber norms.
The event, organized by the Trade and Internet Governance Project of GWU, and the Minerva Initiative of the Department of Defense, examined the hacking from several different perspectives: cyber-security, economics, trade, human rights, and global governance.
Speakers:
Ellen Nakashima, The Washington Post
Dr. Irving Lachow, Director, Technology and Security, Center for a New American Security
Delphine Halgand, Washington Office Director, Reporters without Borders
Grady Summers, Vice President of Mandiant Security
Michael Nelson, Bloomberg Government
by Susan Ariel Aaronson
January 2013
by Stephen C. Smith (George Washington University), Verena Dill (Universität Trier), and Uwe Jirjahn (Universität Trier)
For more information, please visit the blog of the Project on Trade Agreements and Internet governance at tradeandinternet.wordpress.com
TAIG hosted this free conference, providing a wide range of insight into the potential and pitfalls of trade policy to regulate the Internet. Panels included: views from the US, EU, and Canada; a discussion of privacy, intellectual property rights, and Internet freedom; and new ideas to promote trade and Internet freedom. Lee Hibbard from the Council of Europe offered “A Human Rights Perspective”, and Andrew McLaughlin of betaworks gave the luncheon keynote address on “The Future of Internet Freedom”. The full agenda is here. The conference benefited from the support of the John and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Heinrich Böll Foundation, the Computer and Communications Industry Association, the Software and Information Industry Association, the Center for International Business Education and Research (CIBER) at GWU, the National War College and the Minvera Initiative.
Our policy brief, “Can Trade Policy Set Information Free? Trade Agreements, Internet Governance, and Internet Freedom” is here.
Click here to view Dr. Aaronson’s slides (requires Flash)
Lindner Commons, Suite 602
Elliott School of International Affairs
1957 E St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20052
The US – China relationship is now second to none in importance for international economic relations and policy and accordingly is a major focus of IIEP. The centerpiece of this initiative is our annual Conference on China’s Economic Development and U.S.-China Economic Relations (or the “G2 at GW”), which has become one of the premier events of its type. For the last three conferences (2009, 2010, 2011) we created a follow-up online “virtual conference volume”. For information on previous conferences, see our signature initiatives page.
8:15-8:45 AM Continental Breakfast
8:50-9:00 AM Welcome and Overview of the Conference
9:00-10:15 AM Session 1
10:15-10:30 AM Coffee Break
10:30 AM – 12:00 PM Session 2
12:00-1:00 PM Lunch Break
1:00-2:15 PM Session 3
2:15-2:30 PM Coffee Break
2:30-3:45 PM Session 4
An archive of all previous Annual Conferences on China’s Economic Development and U.S.-China Economic Relations is available here.
For more information, please contact Kyle Renner at iiep@gwu.edu or 202-994-5320.
Co-sponsored by:
September 2012
by Olga Timoshenko
IIEP Working Paper 2012-10
September 2012
by Remi Jedwab (GWU and LSE) and Robert Darko Osei (ISSER)
by Tara Sinclair
May 2012
by Stephen C. Smith (co-author Saudamini Das, University of Delhi)
Elliott School of International Affairs
1957 E St. NW
Washington D.C. 20052
The Washington Area International Trade Symposium (WAITS) is a forum that highlights trade research at institutions in the Washington D.C. area. Its primary activity is sponsoring an annual research conference where scholars present their latest academic work. Researchers from George Washington University, American University, the Census Bureau, the Federal Reserve Board, Georgetown University, the Inter-American Development Bank, Johns Hopkins University (SAIS), the U.S. International Trade Commission, the University of Maryland, and the World Bank have all participated in the symposium.
Contact iiep@gwu.edu with any questions.
Kara Reynolds as discussant – Comments
Teresa Fort as discussant – Comments
Michael Moore as discussant – Comments
Zhi Wang as discussant – Comments
Andrei Zlate as discussant – Comments
Logan Lewis as discussant – Comments
Laura Alfaro as discussant – Comments
George Washington University’s Institute for International Economic Policy, housed at the Elliott School of International Affairs, is dedicated to producing and disseminating high-quality non-partisan academic and policy relevant research on international economic policy. Areas of focus include international trade, international finance, and development economics.
by Yao Pan
March 2012
by Llewelyn Hughes (co-author: Francisco Flores-Macias, LCM Commodities)
Ultra-poverty Research Workshop: Finding, Measuring, and Modeling the Ultra-poor
Ultra-Poverty Research in Progress, Morning Session (7th Floor, City View Room)
9:00-9:30 James Foster, GWU, Introduction and Overview
9:30-10:15 Sabina Alkire, Oxford, and Suman Seth, Oxford, Severe Poverty and Sub-national Disparities
10:15-11:00 Oded Stark, Bonn, Relative Poverty: Concept, Measurement, and Social Welfare Repercussions
11:00-11:15 – Coffee Break
11:15-12:00 Michael Carter, UC Davis, Poverty Traps
Lunch 12:00-1:00 (7th Floor, City View Room)
Ultra-Poverty Research in Progress, Afternoon Session I (7th Floor, City View Room)
1:00-1:45 David Stifel, Lafayette and IFPRI Addis, Poverty Mapping Techniques to Track Poverty over Time
1:45-2:30 Nora Lustig, Tulane, Fiscal Redistribution and Fiscal Mobility: A New Concept to Assess the Impact of Benefits and Taxes on the Poor
Coffee Break 2:30-2:45
2:45-3:30 Jose Manuel Roche, Oxford, and Mauricio Apablaza, Oxford, Multidimensional Poverty Dynamics
Coffee Break 3:30-3:45 (7th Floor Lobby)
Ultra-Poverty Research in Progress, Afternoon Session II (7th Floor, State Room)
3:45-4:30 Andy McKay, Sussex, Extreme, Multidimensional, and Chronic Poverty
4:30-5:15 Patrick Vinck, Harvard, Data on Violence, Conflict and Ultra-Poverty
Policy and Program Conference: Ultra-poverty Causes and Remedies
Four Aspects of Ultra-poverty 9:00-11:15 (7th Floor, City View Room)
Stephen Smith, GWU, Overview
James Foster, GWU, Depth and Severity
Sabina Alkire, Oxford, Multiple Deprivations
Andy McKay, Sussex, Multiple Periods
Pete Lanjouw, World Bank, Spatial Concentration
General Discussion
Coffee Break 11:15-11:30
Ultra-poverty: Evidence, Programs and Policy (7th Floor, City View Room)
Session 11:30-12:45 Donor and Civil Society Perspectives
Luis Felipe Lopez-Calva, World Bank, Overview
Steven Radelet, Chief Economist, USAID, A Perspective from USAID
Munshi Sulaiman, BRAC, BRAC’s Ultra-poverty Work in Bangladesh and Africa
Lunch 12:45-1:15 (7th Floor, City View Room)
Evidence, Programs and Policy, continued (7th Floor, City View Room)
1:15-1:45 Ethiopia: Ultra-Poverty Problems and Opportunities
David Stifel, Lafayette and IFPRI-Addis, Infrastructure, Agricultural Productivity, and Poverty
Stephen Smith, GWU, Multidimensional Poverty Traps? Evidence from Ethiopia
1:45-2:15 Bangladesh: Multidimensional Poverty, Targeting, Programs, and Evaluation
Virginia Robano, GWU, Targeting and Assessment with Multidimensional Poverty
Islam Tonmoy, Kentucky, Program Evaluation with Multidimensional Measures
2:15-3:00 Chile and Peru: Poverty in a Middle Income, High Inequality Environment
Veronica Silva, World Bank, Chile
Renos Vakis, World Bank, “The right medicine: TB, agency and productive safety nets – early lessons from the slums of Lima”
Mauricio Apablaza, Oxford, Chronic Multidimensional Poverty in Chile
Coffee Break 3:00-3:15 (6th Floor, Lindner Commons)
Missing Dimensions, Hidden Poverty 3:15-5:30 (6th Floor, Lindner Commons)
Sabina Alkire, Oxford, Overview
Oded Stark, Bonn, Degrading Work
Hans Hoogeveen, World Bank, Disabilities
Elizabeth Kneebone, Brookings, Neighborhood effects
5-minute pause while refreshments and snacks are served on-site
Tony Castleman, GWU, Human Recognition
Jeni Klugman, World Bank, Women and Empowerment
James Foster, GWU, and Sabina Alkire, Oxford, Constructing the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index
5:30-6:00 – Wrap up (6th Floor, Lindner Commons)
To mark International Human Rights Day 2011, George Washington University, the UN Global Compact US Network, and the US Institute of Peace hosted a 1 day conference on the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. These principles, approved by the UN Human Rights Council in June, are designed to help business monitor its human rights impact. These guidelines clarified both the human rights responsibilities of states and firms and made them clear and actionable. Our speakers, representing business, civil society, the US Government, and academia, focused on practical approaches to implementing the Guiding Principles (the GPs).
Thursday, December 8, 2011
9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Grand Ballroom, 3rd Floor
Marvin Center
800 21st Street, NW
9:00-9:10 – Welcoming Remarks
9:10-9:45 – David Arkless President and CEO, Global Corporate and Government Affairs, Manpower, “Why Firms Should Advance Human Rights: Manpower’s approach”
9:45-11:15 – Panel 1 – Addressing the Problems of Slavery and Human Trafficking
Moderator: Pamela Passman, President and CEO, Center for Responsible Enterprise And Trade (CREATe)
11:15-11:30 – Coffee Break
11:30-12:00 – General Discussion: What should policymakers do to encourage adoption of the GPs?
led by Susan Aaronson
12:00-1:00 – Under Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs, Maria Otero
1:00-2:00 – Luncheon Keynote
2:05-3:35 – Panel 2 – How Business Should Operate in Conflict Zones
Moderator: Raymond Gilpin, Director, Center for Sustainable Economies, U.S. Institute of Peace
3:35-3:50 – Coffee Break
3:50-5:20 – Panel 3: General Implementation of the Guiding Principles: Is it difficult to get buy in? Is it costly? What recommendations or roadblocks have you found?
Moderator: Susan Aaronson (GWU)
5:20 – Conference End
Conference organized by:
by Steve Suranovic
by Chrysanthi Hatzimasoura
by James Foster
Conference videos to be uploaded soon.
8:30-9:00 a.m. – Breakfast
9:00-9:15 a.m. – Opening Remarks
Stephen Smith (GWU-IIEP) – Forum on Food Price Increases
9:15-10:45 p.m. – Panel 1 – Causes: Long and Short Term Forces Underlying Food Price Spikes and Trends
Speakers:
9:15-9:45 – Nora Lustig (Tulane University), “Survey of Long and Short Run Factors” – Thought for Food Revisited: Causes, Consequences and Policy Dilemmas
9:45-10:15 – Keith O. Fuglie (Economic Research Service, US Department of Agriculture) – “Global and Regional Food Productivity and Output Trends” – Productivity Growth
10:15-10:45 a.m. – Panel 1 Discussion
10:45-11:15 a.m. – Coffee Break
11:15 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. – Panel 2 – Impacts: Poverty, Nutrition and Welfare Impacts of Food Price Increases
Speakers:
11:15 a.m. – 11:45 p.m. – Francisco Ferreira (World Bank) – “Rising Food Prices and Household Welfare: Evidence from Brazil” – Background Paper
11:45-12:15 p.m. – James Foster (George Washington University) – “Measurement Issues in Assessing Poverty Impacts of Food Price Spikes” – PPT
12:15-12:45 p.m. – Panel 2 Discussion
12:45-2:00 p.m. – Lunch
1:15-2:00 p.m. – Luncheon Keynote: Alain de Janvry (UC Berkeley) – PPT
2:00-4:00 p.m. – Panel 3 – Responses: Policy and Program Responses to Food Price Spikes
Speakers:
2:00-2:30 p.m. – Carlos B Martins-Filho (IFPRI and University of Colorado, Boulder) – “Excessive Food Price Volatility Early Warning System” – PPT and “Maize Excessive Food Price Variability Early Warning System” and “Maize Prices and Returns”
2:30-3:00 p.m. – Maximo Torero (IFPRI) – “Price Volatility in Food and Agricultural Markets: Policy Responses” – PPT
3:00-3:30 pm. – Uma Lele (Author and Development Consultant) – “Policy Responses to Food Price Spikes” – Challenges Facing the Global Architecture for Food and Agriculture Going Forward
3:30-4:00 p.m. – Panel 3 Discussion
Lindner Commons, Suite 602
Elliott School of International Affairs
1957 E St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20052
The US – China relationship is now second to none in importance for international economic relations and policy and accordingly is a major focus of IIEP. The centerpiece of this initiative is our annual Conference on China’s Economic Development and U.S.-China Economic Relations (or the G2 at GW), which has become one of the premier events of its type. For the last three conferences (2009, 2010, and 2011) we created a follow-up online “virtual conference volume”.
Speakers at the first four conferences include Hongbin Li (Tsinghua University, Beijing), Shang-Jin Wei (Columbia Univ.), Lu Ming (Fudan Univ., Shanghai), ZhongXiang Zhang (East-West Center), Peter Yu (Drake), Huang Yasheng (MIT), Li Xuan (FAO), C. Fred Bergsten (Peterson), Loren Brandt (Toronto), Kenneth Lieberthal (Brookings), Zhang Xiaobo (IFPRI), Feng Tian (Chinese Academy for Social Sciences), Meng Lingsheng (Tsinghua), Gao Fei (China Foreign Affairs University (CFAU)), Harry Harding (Virginia), Lixin Colin Xu (World Bank), Zhu Caihua (CFAU), Warwick McKibbin (Australian National Univ., and Eswar Prasad (Brookings).
Next year’s G2 at GW conference will take place on 10-12-2012. The research and policy analysis presented at the first five G2 at GW conferences together form the basis of a planned IIEP volume, to be edited by Professors Michael Moore and Stephen C. Smith.
Continental breakfast at 8:00 AM
9-9:10 AM Welcome and Overview of the Conference
9:15-10:30 AM Economic Transformation in China
Panelists
10:30-10:45 AM Coffee Break
10:45 AM – 12:15 PM Climate Change, Multilateral Trade, and International Financial Rules
Panelists
12:15-1:15 PM Lunch Break
1:15-2:30 PM US and Chinese Policies Towards Intellectual Property Rights
Panelists
2:30-2:45 PM Coffee Break
2:45-4:00 PM Macro topics: Exchange Rates, Economic Growth, and Imbalances
Panelists
An archive of all previous Annual Conferences on China’s Economic Development and U.S.-China Economic Relations is available here.
For more information, please contact Kyle Renner at iiep@gwu.edu or 202-994-5320.
Co-sponsored by:
by Al Wood
by Susan Ariel Aaronson
by Susan Aaronson
by Susan Ariel Aaronson
by Stephen C. Smith
by Stephen C. Smith
by James Foster
by Susan Ariel Aaronson
by Susan Aaronson
IIEP Working Paper 2010-5
by James Foster
IIEP Working Paper 2010-21
by Tara Sinclair
by Steve Suranovic
by Paul Carrillo
by Arun Malik & Stephen C. Smith
by James Foster
by James Foster
by Susan Aaronson
by Susan Aaronson
Gary Clyde Hufbauer and Jisun Kim – Peterson Institute
View the paper here.
This event was made possible by a generous grant from an anonymous donor. It is a discussion of the book Climate Change and the World Trading System, co-authored with Cary Clyde and Jisun Kim (Peterson Institute).
March 2009
by Maggie Chen
by Fred Joutz
IIEP Working Paper 2009-11
by Arun Malik
IIEP Working Paper 2009-10
by Fred Joutz & Michael Bradley
IIEP Working Paper 2009-3
by Steve Suranovic
IIEP Working Paper 2009-12
by Tara Sinclair
IIEP Working Paper 2008-18
by Fred Joutz
IIEP Working Paper 2008-15
July 2008
by Michael Moore
Location Decision of Heterogeneous Multinational Firms By Michael Moore and Maggie Chen
IIEP Working Paper 2008-2
Does Antidumping Use Contribute to Trade Liberalization in Developing Countries? By Michael Moore
IIEP Working Paper 2008-1
by Paul Carrillo
June 2007
by Susan Aaronson
by Arun Malik