Jeremy Bulow
The Richard A. Stepp Professor of Economics at Stanford Graduate School of Business
Schools
- Stanford Graduate School of Business
Links
Biography
Stanford Graduate School of Business
Research Statement
Jeremy Bulow’s research spans economics and finance and includes topics such as industrial organization, international debt, pension funds, auctions, and tobacco. Bulow has taught microeconomics as well as courses on economic aspects of contracts, competition, and markets, and environmental management and policy analysis.
Bio
Jeremy Bulow is the Richard A. Stepp Professor of Economics at Stanford Business School. He served as the Director of the Bureau of Economics of the Federal Trade Commission from 1998-2001. Bulow was co-editor of the American Economic Review from 2005-2008. His research has covered a variety of topics including pension funds, sovereign debt, auctions, and tobacco. He has served as a consultant to government agencies including the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, the World Bank, the British Radiocommunications Authority, and the Federal Reserve. In the private sector, he has consulted to companies in oil, telecoms, credit cards, software, and internet search. Bulow is a fellow of the Econometric Society and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Academic Degrees
- PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1979
- MA, Yale University, 1975
- BA, Yale University, 1975
Academic Appointments
- Professor of Economics, Graduate School of Business, Stanford University, 1979-present
- Visiting Professor, Yale School of Management and Economics Department, 1997 - 1998
- Visiting Research Fellow, World Bank, 1991
- Research Fellow, Center for the Study of the Economy and the State, University of Chicago, 1985
- Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow, 1984-1986
- National Fellow, Hoover Institution, 1982-1983
- Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1979-Present
- National Science Foundation Fellow, 1975-1978
Awards and Honors
- GSB Trust Faculty Fellow, 2017-2018
Teaching
Degree Courses
2017-18
MGTECON 203: Managerial Economics - Accelerated
MGTECON 203 uses the same math as 200 (derivatives and algebra, and not much more) but uses it more often. Previous economics is not necessary, but it does help to be comfortable with simple mathematical models. The business world has become more...
MGTECON 343: The Evolution of Finance
This course provides a framework to understand how uncertainty and technology affect the evolution of finance (and businesses generally), and its illustration with heavy emphasis on recent developments and future trends. In recent years Myron...
2016-17
MGTECON 203: Managerial Economics - Accelerated
MGTECON 203 uses the same math as 200 (derivatives and algebra, and not much more) but uses it more often. Previous economics is not necessary, but it does help to be comfortable with simple mathematical models. The business world has become more...
MGTECON 343: The Evolution of Finance
This course was originally designed to provide an overview of the crisis in financial markets that began in 2007, and of the various policies that were devised in response to the crisis'' both short-term stabilization efforts and longer-term...
In the Media
Don’t Blame Germany for Greece’s Profligacy
Wall Street Journal , April 16, 2015
Time for banking’s petulant toddlers to grow up
Financial Times, August 29, 2013
The Herd Instinct: The Recent Collapse in the Stock Market Has a Perfectly Rational Explanation
The Undercover Economist, Financial Times Weekend Magazine, July 3, 2006
A Simple Way to Value Stock Options
Financial Times, May 2, 2004
Bidding Adieu?
The Economist, July 27, 2002
Survey-Mastering Strategy 7: Strategic Complements and Substitutes
Financial Times, December 8, 1999
Real Campaign Finance Reform
New York Times, September 15, 1999
Insights by Stanford Business
writtenJeremy Bulow: A Better Approach to Bank “Bail-Ins”
May 22, 2014
A Stanford economist and his colleague at Oxford propose a new strategy to reduce the risk of taxpayer-funded bailouts.
writtenFiscal Failings of the Government's Tobacco Settlement
January 1, 2007
An economist examines what went wrong in the landmark 1998 tobacco settlement.
writtenJeremy Bulow: A Market-Based Approach to Expensing Options
July 1, 2004
A scholar parses recent proposals for financial reporting of stock option expenses, and offers a solution that reflects economic realities.
writtenJeremy Bulow: What Causes Gasoline Price Spikes?
August 1, 2002
Production factors and local regulations — not political conspiracies — cause price fluctuations at the pump.
writtenGame Theory: A New Tool for Economists
November 1, 2000
In the last 25 years, many if not most significant innovations in economics have been driven by this methodological innovation.
Videos
DB Prize 2011 - Jeremy Bulow Plenary Lecture
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