Kris James Mitchener is the Robert and Susan Finocchio Professor of Economics at Santa Clara University. He is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and the Centre for Competitive Advantage and the Global Economy (CAGE), and Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) and CESifo.
His research focuses on economic history, international economics, macroeconomics, and political economy. He is a leading expert on the history of financial crises, and is currently researching how banking crises redistribute risk in financial networks and how such networks can amplify the size of recessions. His current research in international economics analyzes how costly trade wars are to bilateral trade flows and explores the causal effects of monetary policy shocks on output and inflation.
His recent book, entitled In Defense of Public Debt, explores the "two faces" of sovereign debt and how, throughout history, it has been used by nations in times of crisis, such as the current global pandemic. His prior research on sovereign debt explores how the adoption of fixed exchange-rate influences risk spreads and how sovereign debt claims have been enforced historically. His path-breaking research on the Great Depression includes articles demonstrating how the size of credit booms influences the severity of the economic downturns and how the infamous banking panics of the 1930s reduced aggregate lending and monetary aggregates.
Prior to his current position, he was professor of economics at the University of Warwick. In 2021-22, he was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Sciences, and from 2009-11, he was the W. Glenn Campbell and Rita-Ricardo Campbell Hoover National Fellow at Stanford University. He has held visiting positions at the Bank of Japan, the Federal Reserve Banks of St. Louis and San Francisco, UCLA, Paris School of Economics, Waseda University, Queens University (Canada), and CREi at Universitat Pompeu Fabra. From 2015-2020, he was editor-in-chief of Explorations in Economic History. He presently serves on the editorial boards of the Financial History Review, Cliometrica, and Cambridge University Press. He received his B.A. (highest honors, Phi Beta Kappa) and Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.
VoxEU Column
Acquisitions redistribute risk after financial crises
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- Economic history ![](../../../../../../../../../../var/folders/34/zq18d8kx7kbgby0j06p_j6t40000gn/T/TemporaryItems/NSIRD_screencaptureui_EM2XPo/Screenshot 2022-01-04 at 17.01.16.png)
- Financial Regulation and Banking
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Disinflation policies and central bank finances
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- Monetary Policy
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Connected lending of last resort
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- Economic history ![](../../../../../../../../../../var/folders/34/zq18d8kx7kbgby0j06p_j6t40000gn/T/TemporaryItems/NSIRD_screencaptureui_EM2XPo/Screenshot 2022-01-04 at 17.01.16.png)
- Financial Regulation and Banking
VoxEU Column
The ghost of Smoot-Hawley tells why America isn’t too big to avoid retaliation
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- International trade
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Public debt through the ages
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- Economic history ![](../../../../../../../../../../var/folders/34/zq18d8kx7kbgby0j06p_j6t40000gn/T/TemporaryItems/NSIRD_screencaptureui_EM2XPo/Screenshot 2022-01-04 at 17.01.16.png)
- Macroeconomic policy