Background
SHAW, Graham Keith was born in 1938 in Rochdale, Lancashire, England.
( This updated edition of Graham Bird's introductory text...)
This updated edition of Graham Bird's introductory text on international macroeconomics is concerned with monetary, fiscal, and exchange rate issues and policy as they affect individual countries in the global economy, rather than with issues of comparative advantage and international trade. As such, it is something of a hybrid between macroeconomics and international economics. The text acts as a brief and accessible guide to the key issues in international macroeconomics. This new edition is fully updated to reflect recent events exemplifying key themes in the subject. These include: the ups and downs of the US dollar in the 1990s and the US's balance of payment problems, the East Asia crisis of the late 1990s, and the establishment and development of the Euro.
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SHAW, Graham Keith was born in 1938 in Rochdale, Lancashire, England.
Bachelor of Science London University, 1960. Doctor of Philosophy Columbia University, 1966.
Assistant Professor of Economics, New York University, New York City, New York, United States of America,
7. Lector Economics, University York, England, 1967-1970. Reader Economics, University Street Andrews, 1971-1979, University East. Anglia, 1979-1980.
Visiting Professor of Economics, University Puerto Rico, 1971, Vassar College,
New York, 1972, University Toledo, Ohio, 1983.
Tax and Fiscal Policy Consultant, Organisation for Economic Company-operation and Development Development Centre, Paris, 1969-1971, Harvard University Development Advisory Service,
3, Nederlands Economics Institute, Institution, 1979. Rank Foundation Professor of Economics, Dean, School of Accounting,
Business and Economics, University Buckingham, Buckingham, England, since 1980.
( This updated edition of Graham Bird's introductory text...)
Macroeconomic theory and policy particularly with reference to fiscal policy and the economics of the budget constraint, with occasional forays into specific aspects of taxation generally, as for example, tax evasion and taxation aspects peculiar to less advanced economies.