The Visiting Scholar Program is part of the Bank of Canada’s multi-year research plan that helps keep the Bank at the forefront of central bank research.
Background & Purpose
The Visiting Scholar Program provides outstanding scholars with an opportunity to work at the Bank of Canada. The Program aims to:
- enable our researchers to work closely with external experts to address innovative policy-related research questions connected to the Bank’s core functions.
- strengthen the Bank’s research agenda and output with the contribution of distinguished scholars;
- further deepen the Bank’s understanding of domestic and international economic and financial issues.
Participants
Participants are accomplished academic researchers with an established reputation in a field relevant to the Bank of Canada.
The program accommodates various visiting schedules, depending on the preferences of participants and the needs of the Bank. At any time, the Bank may host a number of scholars.
For further information related to the program, contact us at:visitingscholarprogram@bankofcanada.ca
Visiting Scholars
Victor Aguirregabiria
Since September 2015
Victor Aguirregabiria is Professor of Economics at the University of Toronto. His research interests include empirical industrial organization, econometrics and microeconomics.
Andrew Levin
Since September 2015
Andrew Levin is Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College. His research interests include monetary economics, macroeconomics, inflation and inflation expectations and central bank communication.
Yuriy Gorodnichenko
Since October 2015
Yuriy Gorodnichenko is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley. His research interests include monetary policy, pricing, aggregate implications of informational frictions and macroeconomics.
Ricardo Lagos
Since January 2016
Ricardo Lagos is a Professor of Economics at New York University. His research interests are in macroeconomics, with an emphasis on monetary and labour economics.
Itay Goldstein
Since February 2016
Itay Goldstein is a Professor of Finance at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. His research interests are in corporate finance, feedback effects between financial markets and the real economy, financial fragility and crises, financial institutions and financial markets.