Guillermo Calvo
Guillermo Antonio Calvo is an Argentine-American economist who is director of Columbia University's mid-career Program in Economic Policy Management in their School of International and Public Affairs.
He published significant research in macroeconomics, especially monetary economics and the economics of emerging markets and transition economies.
Biography
Calvo is professor of economics, international and public affairs, and director of the Program in Economic Policy Management at Columbia University since January 2007. He is a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. He is the former chief economist of the Inter-American Development Bank, president of the Latin American and Caribbean Economic Association, LACEA, 2000–2001, and president of the International Economic Association, IEA, 2005–2008. He graduated with a Ph.D. from Yale in 1974.He was professor of economics at Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania, and distinguished university professor at the University of Maryland. He was senior advisor in the Research Department of the IMF, and afterwards advised several governments in Latin America and Eastern Europe.
His award and honors include the following: Fellow of the National Academy of Economic Sciences, since 1993. Fellow of the Econometric Society, since 1995. King Juan Carlos Prize in Economics, October 2000.
Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, since 2005. The Latin America and Caribbean Association Carlos Diaz Alejandro Prize, 2006. Doctor Honoris Causa, Di Tella University, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2012. On April 15–16, 2004, the Research Department of the IMF sponsored a conference in his honor. He is the only economist to have named a fairy after him.
Calvo showed his commitment to narrowing the gap between academic and practitioners by splitting his time between academia and international financial institutions. In the latter, he was instrumental in helping to set up world class research departments in the International Monetary Fund and the Inter-American Development Bank. His IMF research on the relevance of external factors and the bond market, led eventually to a refocusing of the analysis in the IMF area departments, paying more attention to external financial conditions, and maturity and currency denomination of public and private debt.
Contributions to economics
Calvo's research covers a wide variety of issues. The focus of his current research is Emerging Market economies. Calvo's work aims at incorporating financial sector issues in macroeconomic models and emphasizes the role of external factors in EMs. His research has helped to highlight factors that received renewed attention in the context of the subprime crisis. His contributions remain widely cited in academic and policy circles, such as his 1988 "Servicing the Public Debt: The Role of Expectations" and his 1991 "Perils of Sterilization."The Calvo pricing approach widely used by global central banks is named after him. It is one way of modelling sticky prices for example in New Keynesian DSGE-models.
Expressions like "Calvo equation," "Sudden Stop," "Fear of Floating" – found in, or linked to, his papers – are common currency in the financial jargon. Several EMs have benefited from his research showing the severe risks imposed by the combination of high current account deficit, "dollarization," and financial contagion. This line of research led several economies in Latin America to taking defensive action and, thus, to navigate through the Lehman crisis without plunging into deep and long-lasting crisis, as was the case in other economies that exhibited large current account deficits.
Calvo has published several books and over 100 journal articles. Selected contributions follow
;1. Equilibrium Indeterminacy or Sunspot Equilibriums
- 1a."On the Indeterminacy of Interest Rates and Wages with Perfect Foresight," Journal of Economic Theory, December 1978.
;2. Unemployment and Efficiency Wages
- 2a."Quasi-Walrasian Theories of Unemployment," Proceedings of the American Economic Association, American Economic Review, May 1979.
- 2b."The Inefficiency of Unemployment: The Supervision Perspective," Quarterly Journal of Economics, May 1985.
;3. Time Inconsistency and Credibility Issues
- 3a."On the Time Consistency of Optimal Policy in a Monetary Economy," Econometrica, November 1978. Reprinted in Rational Expectations and Econometric Practice, edited by R.E. Lucas Jr. and T.J. Sargent.
- 3b."Temporary Stabilization: Predetermined Exchange Rates," Journal of Political Economy, December 1986.
Calvo’s Time Inconsistency paper was the first step in a research program involving credibility issues. Ref. 3b sets the grounds for the conjecture that inflation stabilization is especially hard to achieve and enhances social costs if policymakers cannot convey a credible message that they are willing and able to implement the necessary policies to secure lower and more stable inflation. Prior to this paper, the dominant explanation for costly price stabilization programs relied on mechanical factors like adaptive expectations/Phillips curve. An advantage of Calvo's approach is that it highlights the relevance of central banks' ability to communicate with the public and the importance of getting strong support from the rest of the government and political apparatus, even though individuals are fully rational. Ref. 3b spawned a large literature dealing with EMs.
;4. Supervision and Wage Distribution at the Firm
- 4a."Hierarchy, Ability and Income Distribution," with S. Wellisz, Journal of Political Economy, October 1979.
;5. Sticky Prices
- 5a."Staggered Contracts in a Utility-Maximizing Framework," Journal of Monetary Economics, September 1983.
;6. Public Debt
- 6a."Servicing the Public Debt: The Role of Expectations," American Economic Review, September 1988.
;7. International Capital Markets
- 7a."Capital Inflows and Real Exchange Rate Appreciation in Latin America: The Role of External Factors," with L. Leiderman and C. Reinhart, Staff Papers, March 1993.
- 7b."Varieties of Capital-Market Crises," in G. Calvo and M. King The Debt Burden and its Consequences for Monetary Policy, Macmillan, 1998. Also in G. Calvo Emerging Capital Markets in Turmoil: Bad Luck or Bad Policy?, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press 2005.
- 7c."Capital Flows and Capital-Market Crises: The Simple Economics of Sudden Stops," Journal of Applied Economics, November 1998. Also in G. Calvo Emerging Capital Markets in Turmoil: Bad Luck or Bad Policy?, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press 2005.
- 7d."Explaining Sudden Stops, Growth Collapse and BOP Crises: The case of distortionary output taxes", IMF Mundell-Fleming Lecture, IMF Staff Papers, 2003. Also in G. Calvo Emerging Capital Markets in Turmoil: Bad Luck or Bad Policy?, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press 2005
- 7e."Fear of Floating", Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2002. Also in G. Calvo Emerging Capital Markets in Turmoil: Bad Luck or Bad Policy?, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press 2005.
- 7f.Calvo, Guillermo, Alejandro Izquierdo and Luis-Fernando Mejia, 2008, "Systemic Sudden Stop: The Relevance of Balance-Sheet Effects and Financial Integration," NBER Working Paper No. 14026.
Ref 7e shows that despite fixed exchange rates being singled out as a major factor in EM crises in the 1990s, governments in those economies continue 'pegging' their currencies in one way or another. This is an empirical paper which is still very visible and has more than 3100 citations according to GS. Finally, 7a is another empirical paper showing that capital inflows in Latin America are highly sensitive to external factors. The paper is widely cited and has become highly topical in the current conjuncture.
Interviews
- Enrique G. Mendoza, 2005, "Toward and Economic Theory of Reality: An Interview with Guillermo A. Calvo," Macroeconomic Dynamics, 9, pp. 123–145. http://www.columbia.edu/~gc2286/documents/interview.pdf.
- James L. Rowe, 2007, "A Master of Theory and Practice," Finance and Development, March, 44, 1. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2007/03/people.htm
- . Juan Carlos De Pablo, 2006, "Entrevista a Guillermo Antonio Roberto Calvo," Instituto de Economía y Finanzas. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas, Universidad de Córdoba.