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Nicholas Gregory Mankiw (born February 3, 1958) is a macroeconomist. In 2003, he became the chairman of President Bush's Council of Economic Advisors.

Mankiw was born in Trenton, New Jersey. Graduating from Princeton University summa cum laude in 1980 with an A.B. in Economics, he worked as a staff economist for the Council of Economic Advisers from 1982-83, foreshadowing his later position as chairman of that organization. After leaving the Council, he earned his Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1984. He taught at MIT for a year and then became an assistant professor of Economics at Harvard University in 1985 and full professor in 1987. He returned to politics when he was appointed Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors in May 2003. He has since returned to teaching at Harvard, taking over the introductory economics course, Social Analysis 10, taught for many years by Martin Feldstein. He is currently a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

He has written many popular college-level textbooks, most of which are selections of his Principles of Economics, which is popular among high-school Advanced Placement Economics teachers. Altogether, one million copies of the books have been sold in seventeen languages.

Mankiw is a New Keynesian economist. He did important work on menu costs, which are a source of price stickiness, one of the fundamental tenets of the New Keynesian economics (not necessarily of Keynes' economics). In 1989, he wrote a paper arguing that the aging of the baby boomers was going to undermine the housing market in the 1990s and 2000s. His advocacy at the CEA of tax cuts even in the face of large deficits led some other economists, such as Paul Krugman and J. Bradford DeLong, to criticize him as in thrall to Bush administration policies.

Mankiw has become increasingly influential in the Blogosphere and online journalism since launching his blog. The blog, while ostensibly prepared to assist his Ec10 students, has managed to gain a readership that extends far beyond students of introductory economics.

Controversy


Several controversies arose from CEA's February 2004 Economic Report of the President.In a press conference, Mankiw spoke of the gains from free trade, noting that outsourcing of jobs by U.S. companies is "probably a plus for the economy in the long run."* While this reflected mainstream economic analysis, it was criticized by many people who drew a link between outsourcing and the still-slow recovery of the U.S. labor market in early 2004. The White House economic forecast contained in the report was criticized for being overly optimistic about job gains--and indeed, job growth turned out to be slower than the Administration forecast.

Controversy also arose from a rhetorical question posed by the report (and repeated by Mankiw in a speech about the report): "when a fast-food restaurant sells a hamburger, is it providing a service or combining inputs to manufacture a product?" The intended point was that the distinction between manufacturing and service industry is somewhat arbitrary and therefore a poor basis for policy. Even though the issue was not raised in the report, a news account [http://select.nytimes.com/search/restricted/article?res=F2081EFD3A590C738EDDAB0894DC404482 led to criticism that the Administration was seeking to cover up job losses in manufacturing by redefining jobs such as flipping hamburgers as manufacturing.

Important Works


External links


1958 births | American economists | Harvard University faculty | Living people | Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni | People from New Jersey | United States Council of Economic Advisors

Nicholas Gregory Mankiw | グレゴリー・マンキュー | N. Gregory Mankiw | Манкью, Грегори

 

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