Abel began his teaching career at the University of Chicago and Harvard University, and served as a visiting professor at Tel Aviv University and Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Abel is a prolific scholar whose works cover a wide range of fields such as fiscal policy, capital formation, monetary policy, asset pricing and social security. In addition, he is a member of the editorial boards of many journals, a senior member of Alfred Si Long and a member of the Econometrics Society, and won the John Kenneth Galbraith Prize for his outstanding teaching work. Abel is also a visiting scholar at the Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank, a member of the Economic Advisory Group of the US Congressional Budget Office, and a member of the Technical Advisory Group of the US Social Security Advisory Committee, which makes suggestions on assumptions and methods. He is also an associate researcher at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a member of the advisory board of Carnegie-Rochester conference series. Bence. Bernanke, Federal Reserve System Management Committee
Ben S Bernanke was Howard Harrison and Howard Harrison B. Ries Nedbeck, professors of economics and public affairs at Princeton University. He obtained a bachelor's degree in economics from Harvard University with honors, and won the Arlene Young Award for the Best Economics Thesis of Harvard University and the John H Williams Award for Outstanding Senior Students in Economics Department. Like Abel, the book's co-author, Bernanke received his Ph.D. from MIT.
Bernanke started his teaching career in stanford graduate school of business on 1979, went to Princeton University on 1985, and served as the head of the economics department of the school from 1995 to 2002. He has served as a visiting professor at MIT twice and new york University once, and has undertaken the teaching tasks of undergraduate, MBA, MBA and doctoral students. He has published more than 60 papers on macroeconomics, macroeconomic history and finance.
Bernanke is also a visiting scholar and consultant of the Federal Reserve System, a Guggenheim scholar and a member of the Econometrics Society. In addition, he has won various honors, including Alfred P. Sloan, a national researcher at the Hoover Institution, a postgraduate award from the National Science Foundation and an associate researcher at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Bernanke is a member of the editorial board of AmericanEconomicReview. In 2005, he became the chairman of the US President's Council of Economic Advisers, and now he is the chairman of the Federal Reserve System Management Committee. Crusoe, Dean of Robbins Business School of the University of Richmond, is an associate professor of economics at the University of Richmond and a Lei Gesi Prize winner. He received a bachelor's degree from Ohio University and a doctorate from Ohio State University.
Crushaw began his teaching career at Pennsylvania State University on 1984. Five years later, he went to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia and served as the vice president and economist of the bank. During his tenure 14 years, his main responsibilities included overall responsibility for the work of the Macroeconomics Department, explaining the economic operation to the President and the Management Committee and providing them with suggestions on formulating monetary policy, writing articles on the economy, taking charge of the investigation projects of two American national forecasting agencies, and studying the current issues related to monetary policy. While working at the Federal Reserve Bank, Crushaw also created a professional forecaster survey (inheriting and replacing the previous ASA/NBER survey) and developed a real-time data set system for macroeconomists.
Crushaw came to teach at the University of Richmond in 2003 and returned to academia. In recent years, his research focuses on how forecasting and data revision affect monetary policy, forecasting and macroeconomic research. Crushaw not only published many papers in top economic magazines, but also published a textbook on money and banks. He also served as deputy editor-in-chief of many economic magazines and visiting scholar of Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank.