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Nouriel  Roubini

Nouriel Roubini

World Renowned Economist

Nouriel Roubini

World Renowned Economist

Biography

Nouriel Roubini is the Chairman & CEO of Roubini Macro Associates, LLC, a global macroeconomic consultancy firm in New York. He is also Senior Advisor to Hudson Bay Capital, a hedge fund based in New York and serves as the Chief Economist & Portfolio Manager at Atlas Capital Team L.P, a fintech ecosystem developed to serve as a source of stability for the challenging times ahead. He has been Professor of Economics (1995-2021) and is now Professor Emeritus (2021-present), at New York University’s Stern School of Business.

Previously, he served as the Senior Economist for International Affairs in the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers and has worked for the International Monetary Fund, the US Federal Reserve, The World Bank and was on the faculty of Yale University’s Department of Economics.

Dr. Roubini’s views on global economic issues are widely sought and cited by the media, having recognized ahead of others the 2008 global financial crisis, the effects of which reverberated around the world lasting well into the next decade. He is a frequent commentator on various business news programs and has been the subject of extended profiles in many leading current-affairs publications including the New York Times Magazine & The Financial Times. He is published monthly as a columnist with Project Syndicate. He also co runs the site www.theboombust.com, an economic indicator research service.

His most recent book, published in October 2022, is Megathreats: Ten Dangerous Trends That Imperil Our Future and How to Survive Them (Little Brown). He has also published numerous theoretical, empirical and policy papers on international macroeconomic issues and coauthored the books Political Cycles: Theory and Evidence (MIT Press, 1997) and Bailouts or Bail-ins? Responding to Financial Crises in Emerging Markets (Institute for International Economics, 2004) and Crisis Economics: A Crash Course in the Future of Finance (Penguin Press, 2010). 

Dr. Roubini received an undergraduate degree at Bocconi University in Milan, Italy, and a Doctorate in Economics at Harvard University.

Speaker Videos

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Speech Topics

Upsides & Downsides in the Global Economy & Financial Markets

The outlook for the global economy and financial markets is mixed. The positives and upside include a pick-up in global growth after years of a new mediocre, profitable corporate firms, better business and consumer confidence, more optimistic investors with markets in risk-on mode, the rise of emerging markets, new technologies and innovation. The downside are however several: uncertainties about Trumponomics, the risks of European and Eurozone dis-integration, the potential for a hard landing of highly indebted China, the sluggish global growth and productivity in a world of high private and public debts, the frothiness in financial markets and the risks of assets and credit bubbles fed by easy monetary policies, the backlash against globalization and geopolitical risks. Markets are now bullish is not bubbly but the economies are still sluggish. Roubini argues that a new policy framework is needed to minimize the downsides and maximize the upsides.

US Economic & Financial Outlook

Uncertainties remain about the economic policies of Trump and their impact on the US economy and markets. Since the presidential election investors have become bullish pushing financial markets to new highs while business and consumer confidence have risen in spite of still sluggish growth. Investors hope that fiscal stimulus, infrastructure spending, tax reform and deregulation will boost growth and markets. A honeymoon can continue for quite a while if positive policies are properly implemented. But markets may be overestimating Trump’s ability to deliver positive policy changes and the impact of such changes on a potential growth that is kept low by longer term and structural forces. Markets may also be underestimating some of the potential negatives of Trumponomics: protectionism and the risk of trade wars; restrictions to migration that may slow growth in an ageing society; inefficient micro-management of the decisions of the corporate sector on where to produce, invest and hire; a sub-optimal policy mix with loose fiscal policy in an economy close to full employment that will force the Fed to tighten sooner and more; that could lead to higher interest rates and a stronger dollar that will hurt jobs and growth. Roubini argues that the jury is still out on whether Trumponomics will be more populist and protectionist or more mainstream and pragmatic, even if the latter scenario looks more likely.

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