Given that this is an online information session,
Prof. Langdana has decided to add a small and highly applied virtual Macroeconomic module on global inflation in the information session. Attendees can actually “take away” some very topical information. Keep in mind that Economics has been ranked #2 in the world in Rutgers EMBA by Financial Times, five times in a row and in the top 10 over eight times.
Session description:
Global inflation seems to be heading down. Singapore grapples with the effects of the soft landings of the United States and the EU and the slowdown in China. What are the policies and issues that will drive the macroeconomic outlook for Singapore?
About the Professor:
Dr. Langdana’s areas of specialization include monetary and fiscal theory and international trade and global macroeconomic policy. His research deals with macroeconomic experimentation and the role of stabilization policy in an expectations-driven economy. He has published several articles as well as five books in this area. His new book, co-authored with Peter Murphy and published by Springer Press, is titled “International Trade and Global Macropolicy.”
Prof. Langdana’s Macropolicy course and Prof. Ignacio (Nacho) Vijil-Cabrera’s course in Pricing Strategy (Managerial Econ) have both been ranked in the Top Five in the World by Financial Times for five years in a row and in the Top 10 over eight times. In 2021, Prof. Langdana was featured as the lead story in the article “15 Executive MBA Professors who made a Difference in 2021” by Poets and Quants. More recently, Langdana was featured in an interview with CEO Magazine (London) that has consistently ranked Rutgers EMBA in the Top 10 in the world.
More about Professor Langdana…
Follow him on twitter:
Fireside chats with Langdana: https://twitter.com/fscwithfarrokh?lang=en
About the subject:
Aggregate Economics
By Professor Farrokh Langdana
Director of Executive MBA Program
Aggregate Economics is a module in applied global macroeconomic policy analysis. Current global fiscal and monetary policies, budget and trade deficits, global capital flows, and their effects on inflation, output, employment, interest rates, stock prices, housing bubbles, commodities, and exchange rates, are analyzed. Current macroeconomic policies in the U.S., Europe and Asia are also analyzed and discussed.