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Hogendorn Lectures
The generosity of alumnus Jan Hogendorn '60 has allowed the department to
sponsor the annual Hogendorn Lecture, whereupon a Wesleyan alumnus who has
gone on to a career in economics has come back to deliver a talk, thereby
providing a good example for other Wesleyanites to follow.
2007 Donald Sexton '63
2006 W. David Montgomery
'66
2005 Lawrence Kenny '72
2004 John Hanson '64
2003 Lael Brainard '83
2002 Jan Hogendorn '60
2001 Leonard Burman '75
2000 Steven Sheffrin '72
1999 Loren Brandt '77
1998 John Lipsky '68
1997 William Johnson '68
1996 Kenneth West '73
1995 Roy Epstein '77
1994 Juliet Schor '75
1993 David Lipton '75
1992 Alan Marcus '76
1991 Dale Henderson '63
1990 Warren Weber '65
1989 Jeffrey Williamson
'57
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Spr 89 Jeffrey Williamson '57
Harvard University
"Did British Labor Markets Fail During the Industrial
Revolution?"
Spr 90 Warren Weber '65
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"Nonfundamental Uncertainty and Exchange Rates"
Spr 91 Dale Henderson '63
Federal Reserve Board of Governors
"Monetary Policy in Interdependent Economies: A Game Theoretic
Approach"
Spr 92 Alan Marcus '76
Boston College
"What's Special about the Specialist?"
Fall 93 David Lipton '75
Assistant Treasury Secretary
"The FSU: What is to be Done Now?"
Spr 94 Juliet Schor '75
Harvard University
"The Overworked American"
Spr 95 Roy Epstein '77
Analysis Group, Inc.
"Antitrust and Higher Education: Was There a Conspiracy to
Restrict Financial Aid?"
Spr 96 Ken West '73
University of Wisconsin
"Business Investment and Output Fluctuations in Japan"
Spr 97 Bill Johnson '68
University of Virginia
"Black-White Wage Differences and Pre-Market Skills"
Fall 97 John Lipsky '68
Chase Manhattan
"The Asian Crisis, Global Growth, and the International
Financial System"
Fall 99 Loren Brandt '77
University of Toronto
"Property Rights, Labour Markets, and Efficiency in a Transition
Economy:
The Case of Rural China"
Spr 00 Steven Sheffrin '72
University of California-Davis
"Property Taxes and Tax Revolt"
Spr 01 Leonard Burman '75
Georgetown University and Urban Institute
"First Do No Harm: Can Tax Incentives Increase Health Coverage?"
Spr 02 Jan Hogendorn '60
Colby College
"The Expensive Monetary Transition of the British West African
Colonies
with Some Lessons for
Today's Developing Countries"
Spr 03 Lael Brainard '83
Brookings Institution
"Smoothing the Rough Edges of the Global Economy: Is America Up
to the Task?"
Spr 04 John Hanson '64
Texas A&M
"The Contingency of Economic Freedom"
Spr 05 Lawrence Kenny '72
University of Florida
"Tax Systems in the World: An Empirical Investigation into the
Importance of Tax Bases,
Administration Costs,
Scale and Political Regime"
Spr 06 W. David Montgomery '66
CRA International
"Designing
Climate Change Policies to Create Credible Incentives for R&D"
Spr 07 Donald Sexton '63
Columbia University
"How Branding
Affects Shareholder Value"
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