Şebnem Kalemli-Özcan

Schreiber Family Professor of Economics
Areas of Expertise Global Finance & Banking, International Institutions, Supply Chains, Trade
Areas of Interest International economics, finance, macroeconomics

Biography

Şebnem Kalemli-Özcan ’00 Ph.D. is Schreiber Family Professor of Economics and the Director of the Global Linkages Lab. She is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and a Research Fellow at the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). She is the co-editor of American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics. She also serves at the economic advisory panels of the NY Federal Reserve and the Bank of International Settlements.

Formerly, she was the Duisenberg Fellow at the European Central Bank, Lead Economist for the Middle East and North Africa Region of the World Bank, Houblon-Norman Fellow of Bank of England, Senior Policy Advisor at the International Monetary Fund and the International Fellow of Council of Foreign Relations where she is also an elected member. She is the first Turkish social scientist who has received the 2008 Marie Curie IRG prize aimed to reverse brain drain for her research on European financial integration. 

Research

Şebnem Kalemli-Özcan's research sits at the intersection of international macroeconomics, global finance, and production networks, with a strong emphasis on micro-level data. She studies how capital flows, risk premia, and financial frictions shape global business cycles and the transmission of shocks across countries. A hallmark of her pioneering work is the use of granular firm-, bank-, and security-level datasets (including ORBIS, credit regiteries from Turkey, Spain and Chile, administrative portfolio data from the U.S. TIC and Euro Area SHS, and multinationals production records) to quantify the mechanisms behind international financial integration, cross-border bank lending, and global value chains. Her recent work examines how tariffs, geopolitical risk, and policy uncertainty propagate through multi-country, multi-sector models, influencing inflation, productivity, and asset prices. She has also contributed to venues like Jackson Hole Symposium with influential research on the policy making on the internatinal spillovers of US monetary policy, capital flows, international arbitrage deviations, expectations of exchange rate fluctuations, the role of the U.S. dollar in the international monetary system, and emerging-market vulnerabilities.

Teaching

International Finance

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