With the Fed’s balance sheet at $3.2 trillion and counting, policy makers might find themselves looking to Economics Professor Scott Sumner’s Nominal GDP policy where less is more.
Newsroom: Media Coverage
Len Morrison, Director of Career Services, provides insight into the recruitment process for the Class of 2013.
Steve Weisman, senior lecturer and author of 50 Ways to Protect Your Identity in a Digital Age speaks on the serious aftermath of identity theft and offers suggestions on how to stay safe online.
Economics Professor and Money Illusion blogger Scott Sumner is quoted in a piece about the current standing of the U.S. economy.
Professor of Economics, Scott Sumner, highlighted as an influential advocate for a more expansionary Federal policy, comments on the benefits related to looser monetary policy.
Christopher Beneke, associate professor of History, and Randall Stephens, reader in History at Northumbria University, explore their assertion that the Republican party and higher education are facing similar problems.
P. Thompson Davis, professor of natural & applied sciences, is featured for his published work "The Geology of New Hampshire's White Mountains". Davis, along with six other scientists, published the book that illustrates all aspects of the area's geologic history.
Laurence H. Meyer, co-founder of Macroeconomic Advisers, former Federal Reserve governor and former Fed Challenge judge, discusses the Fed's asset purchase-based monetary policy and receives questions from students, Erik Larsson and Tom Moore along with Professor of Economics Aaron Jackson.
Economics Professor Aaron Jackson and students Erik Larsson and Tom Moore discuss their experience competing in the 2012 Fed Challenge on Bloomberg Radio's "The Hays Advantage."
Co-founders of the Life Is Good Company Bert and John Jacobs will be speaking at Bentley's commencement ceremony this year.