Robert Reed

Robert Reed
Associate Professor of Economics
Economics, Finance & Legal Studies
Office: 266 Alston Hall, 205-348-8667
Specialty Areas:
Monetary Theory, Labor Economics, Endogeous Growth, Search Theory
Education:
Ph.D. Pennsylvania State University, 1998, Economics

Selected Publications

  • “The Role of Financial Sector competition for Monetary Policy.” (With E. Ghossoub and T. Laosuthi.)  Canadian Journal of Economics.  Forthcoming.
  • “Liquidity Risk, Economic Development, and the Effects of Monetary Policy.” (With E. Ghossoub.) European Economic Review.  February 2010.
  • “Regional External Economics and Economic Growth Under Asymmetry.” (With Dmtryo Holod.) Southern Economic Journal. April 2009.
  • “Money and Risk Sharing.” (With Chris Waller.) Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking. September 2006.
  • “Knowledge Exchange, Matching, and Agglomeration.” (With Marcus Berliant and Ping Wang.) Journal of Urban Economics. July 2006.
  • “Decentralized International Exchange.” (With Kathleen Trask.) Canadian Journal of Economics. May 2006.
  • “Social Security and Intergenerational Redistribution.” in H. Bunzel, B.J. Christensen, G.R. Neumann, and J.M. Robin (eds), (With Joydeep Bhattacharya.) 2006. Structural Models of Wage and Employment Dynamics. 2006.
  • “Money and Specialization in a Neoclassical Growth Model.” (With Edgar Ghossoub.) Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking. October 2005.
  • “Labor Market Search and Optimal Retirement Policy.” (With Casey Mulligan and Joydeep Bhattacharya.) Economic Inquiry. October 2004. Selected by the Economic Inquiry Editorial Board as Recipient of the 2005 Best Article Award.
  • “Regional Spillovers, Economic Growth, and the Effects of Economic Integration.” (With Dmytro Holod.)   Economics Letters. October 2004.
  • “Jack of All Trades or a Master of One? Specialization, Trade, and Money.” (With Gabriele Camera and Chris Waller.) International Economic Review. November 2003.
  • “Can Monetizing Trade Lower Welfare? An Example.” (With Gabriele Camera and Chris Waller.) Economics Letters.  November 2003.