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home > the cfr think tank > experts > matthew j. slaughter
Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization
Contact Info:
Phone: +1-603-646-2939
E-mail: matthew.j.slaughter@dartmouth.edu
Location:
Hanover, NH
Media downloads:
High-resolution photo (JPG, 1.2 MB)
One-page bio (PDF, 25K)
CV (PDF, 51K)
Professor of business administration at Dartmouth University and former member of the Council of Economic Advisers. Currently coauthoring a report that documents growing international trends to restrict foreign direct investment.
Expertise:The economics and politics of globalization, multinational firms and capital markets, immigration, technological innovation, and the causes and consequences of the globalization backlash
Experience:Associate Professor of Business Administration, Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College (2002–Present); Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research (2002–Present); Member, Conference on Research in Income and Wealth, National Bureau of Economic Research (2006–Present); Board of Academic Advisors, International Tax Policy Forum (2005–Present); Board of Academic Advisors, Tuck Center for Private Equity and Entrepreneurship (2005-Present); Member, Council of Economic Advisers, Executive Office of the President (2005–2007); Assistant and Associate Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College (1994-2002);Faculty Research Fellow, National Bureau of Economic Research (1995-2002); Term Member, Council on Foreign Relations (2000-2005); Visiting Fellow, Institute for International Economics (1997–Present); Panel Member, National Academy of Sciences (2004-2005); Visiting Scholar, Federal Reserve Board (1998, 2002);Visiting Scholar, International Monetary Fund (1996-1997); Consultant, World Bank (1995-1997, 2000, 2002); Board of Economists, Time Magazine (2004);Consultant to individual and groups of multinational firms (various).
Languages:French (familiar)
Selected Publications:"Public Finance and Individual Preferences Over Globalization Strategies," with Gordon H. Hanson and Kenneth F. Scheve, Economics and Politics, 19(1), 2007;"Vertical Production Networks in Multinational Firms," with Gordon H. Hanson and Raymond J. Mataloni, Jr., Review of Economics and Statistics, 87(4), 2005; "Economic Insecurity and the Globalization of Production," with Kenneth F. Scheve, American Journal of Political Science, 48 (4), 2004. Globalization and the Perceptions of American Workers, with Kenneth F. Scheve, Washington , DC: Institute for International Economics, 2001.
Current Research Project
Past Research Project
April 2, 2008
| Author: | Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization |
|---|
Op-Ed
Wall Street Journal
Matthew J. Slaughter argues that our immigration policy keeps out many of the world’s best workers, and as a result threatens America’s competitiveness. The solution? Eliminate the cap on H1-B visas.
See more in United States, Immigration
March 27, 2008
| Author: | Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization |
|---|
Op-Ed
Wall Street Journal
Ford Motor Company recently announced it will sell its Jaguar and Land Rover divisions to India's Tata Group. In this Wall Street Journal op-ed Matthew Slaughter argues that such foreign direct investment has long been a source of strength for the American economy. American policy makers should strive to make the U.S. a premier location for the dynamic, high-productivity activities of globally engaged companies—both insourcing companies and U.S. multinationals alike.
See more in United States, India, Economic Development, Technology Transfer
September 26, 2007
| Author: | Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization |
|---|
Op-Ed
Wall Street Journal
Many are viewing the UAW-GM strike as Exhibit A for how globalization damages America . Matthew Slaughter argues that America ’s automobile industry is a prime example of the aggregate gains generated by the dynamic and interrelated forces of trade, investment and technological change. He questions how the presidential contenders will craft an American economic policy that both allows greater globalization and also spreads its gains as widely as possible.
See more in United States, Labor, U.S. Election 2008
July 17, 2007
| Author: | Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization |
|---|
Op-Ed
Wall Street Journal
The Information Technology Agreement signed in 1996 played a significant role in the doubling of productivity growth over the past decade. To maintain this rate of income growth, further liberalization is needed.
See more in Business & Foreign Policy, Trade, Technology and Foreign Policy
July/August 2007
| Authors: | Kenneth Scheve Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization |
|---|
Foreign Affairs Article — Summary
Globalization has brought huge overall benefits, but earnings for most U.S. workers -- even those with college degrees -- have been falling recently; inequality is greater now than at any other time in the last 70 years. Whatever the cause, the result has been a surge in protectionism. To save globalization, policymakers must spread its gains more widely. The best way to do that is by redistributing income.
See more in Geoeconomics
May 22, 2007
| Author: | Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization |
|---|
Op-Ed
Wall Street Journal
Matthew Slaughter argues that China's exchange rate policy has no long-run effect on real economic outcomes such as output and trade flows.
See more in China, International Finance
April 25, 2007
| Presider: | Daniel K. Tarullo, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center |
|---|---|
| Panelists: | Alan Krueger, Professor of Economics and Public Policy, Princeton University School of Public Affairs Stephen S. Roach, Chief Economist and Managing Director, Morgan Stanley Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization, Council on Foreign Relations, and Associate Professor of Business Administration, Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College |
Transcript
In this special edition of the World Economic Update, the panelists consider some of the broader global economic trends such as the impact on jobs and wages, the changing role of China in the world economy, and the backlash against globalization.
See more in Economics
April 24, 2007
| Speakers: | Alan B. Krueger, Bendheim Professor of Economics and Public Policy, the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University Stephen S. Roach, Chief Economist and Managing Director, Morgan Stanley Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization, Council on Foreign Relations; Associate Professor of Business Administration, Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College |
|---|---|
| Presider: | Daniel K. Tarullo, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center |
Video
Watch experts discuss broader global economic trends, such as the global labor market, China's changing role in the world economy, and the backlash against globalization, in this special edition of the Council's signature World Economic Update Series.
See more in China, Economics, Labor
April 24, 2007
| Speakers: | Alan B. Krueger, Bendheim Professor of Economics and Public Policy, the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University Stephen S. Roach, Chief Economist and Managing Director, Morgan Stanley Matthew J. Slaughter, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Business and Globalization, Council on Foreign Relations; Associate Professor of Business Administration, Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College |
|---|---|
| Presider: | Daniel K. Tarullo, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center |
Audio
Listen to experts discuss broader global economic trends, such as the global labor market, China's changing role in the world economy, and the backlash against globalization, in this special edition of the Council's signature World Economic Update Series.
See more in China, Economics, Labor
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This report, by International Affairs Fellow Michelle D. Gavin and sponsored by the Center for Preventive Action, surveys the current situation in Zimbabwe and proposes steps that can increase the likelihood that regime change, when it comes, will bring constructive reform instead of conflict and state collapse.
Complete list of Council Special Reports.
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For more information on the David Rockefeller Studies Program, contact:
Gary Samore
Vice President, Director of Studies, and Maurice R. Greenberg Chair
+1-212-434-9627
gsamore@cfr.org
Sebastian Mallaby
Director of the Maurice R. Greenberg Center for
Geoeconomic Studies, Deputy Director of Studies, and Paul A. Volcker Senior
Fellow for International Economics
smallaby@cfr.org
Janine Hill
Deputy Director of Studies Administration
+1-212-434-9753
jhill@cfr.org
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