Simon Johnson

Professor of Entrepreneurship, Global Economics and Management
MIT Sloan School of Management

Prof. Johnson is the Ronald A. Kurtz (1954) Professor of Entrepreneurship at MIT Sloan School of Management. He is also a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, D.C., a co-founder of BaselineScenario.com (a much cited website on the global economy), and a member of the Congressional Budget Office's Panel of Economic Advisers. Prof. Johnson is a weekly contributor to NYT.com's Economix, has a monthly column with Project Syndicate that runs in publications around the world, and has published high impact opinion pieces recently in The Atlantic, The New Republic, BusinessWeek, Bloomberg, and The Financial Times, among other places. In January 2010, he joined The Huffington Post as contributing business editor.

Professor Johnson is the co-author, with James Kwak, of 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and The Next Financial Meltdown, a bestselling assessment of the dangers now posed by the US financial sector (published by Pantheon in March 2010).

From March 2007 through the end of August 2008, Prof. Johnson was the International Monetary Fund's Economic Counsellor (chief economist) and Director of its Research Department. He is a co-director of the NBER Africa Project, and works with non-profits and think tanks around the world.

My Video Content

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Simon Johnson, Professor of Entrepreneurship, Global Economics and Management at the Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, speaking in the panel "Can Sovereignty and Effective International Supervision be Reconciled?

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The Inaugural Conference @ King's, Institute for New Economic Thinking, Session 4: Political Economy: What Can Government Do? What Will Government Do?

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MIT Professor Simon Johnson notes that technological change can influence society unequally, and perhaps exacerbate societal schisms. Interviewed by Daniel Erasmus at King's College, April 2010.

My Additional Content

This book presents a novel approach to the reform of the world’s financial system, starting with the basic question, what is a financial system for? It shows that the existing system has become far more complicated than it needs to be to discharge its functions – and dangerously unstable into...

Though this blistering book identifies many causes of the recent financial crisis, from housing policy to minimum capital requirements for banks, the authors lay ultimate blame on a dominant deregulatory ideology and Wall Street's corresponding political influence.

Presentation given at the Conference @ King's, April 8th-11th, 2010.