Home PageLong CV | BooksArticles | Books | Email

Dominick Salvatore
Lectures and Colloquia

 
TOPICS

Euro and European Union
Euro and the Dollar
International Monetary System
Financial Crises
 
New Economy and Growth
Globalization and International Competitiveness
Globalization, Growth and Poverty
Trade and Development
Economic Integration and Restructuring

World Economic Prospects
Structural Imbalances and World Economic Stability
The Economic Giants of the Future
China’s Growth and Its Effect on the US, EU, and Japan 

 

Dr. Salvatore gave more than 300 lectures all over the world: at the United Nations, New York  Academy of Sciences, Harvard University, Stanford University, New York University, Boston University, Indiana University, University of California, Johns Hopkins University, University of Florida, University of San Diego, University of Michigan, State and City Universities of New York, Western Washington University, and the University of Wisconsin; The Universities of Montreal, Ottawa, Simon Fraser, and Windsor in CanadaIn Europe at the Universities of York, Nottingham, Reading, and Sussex in England; Berlin, Bologna, Bruxelles, Budapest, Coimbra, Dresden, Florence, Genova, Krems, Lisbon, Ljubliana, Marseilles, Milan, Pavia, Porto, Prague, Rome, Triest, Tubingen, Valencia, and Vienna.  Bar-Ilan University  in Israel. In Monterrey, Mexico City, Bogota, Buenos Aires, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Puerto Rico in Latin America; Johannesburg, Pretoria and Capetown in Africa; Bangkok, Jakarta, Seoul, and Singapore in Asia.

He lectured on trade policies at Beijing and Shanghai Universities in China for the U.S. National Academy of Sciences in summer 1988, on restructuring in Eastern Europe at the Tenth World Congress of the International Economic Association in Moscow in August 1992, the Euro at the Economic Commission of Europe in Brussels in 1998, International Competitiveness at the Academy of Excellence at the Austrian Ministry of Economics and Labor in June 2000, International Competitiveness at the Institute for World Economics in Budapest in October 2001, Globalization, Growth and Poverty on the XXIX Pio Manzu International Conference on the Economics of the Noble Path in Rome in October 2003, Trade Asymmetries at the Bundesbank in Frankfurt in July 2004, the Euro, the Dollar and the International Monetary System at the Annual Meetings of the American Economic Association in Philadelphia in January 2005, Currency Misalignments and Trade Asymmetries among Major Economic Areas at  the Universities Peking and Shanghai in November, Can NAFTA Be a Steppingstone to North American Monetary Integration at the Kiel Institute of World Economy in September 2006, Our Common Humanity in the Information Age: Principles and Values for Development at the United Nations in New York in November 2006, Currency Misalignments and Trade Asymmetries in the Major Economic Areas at the Asia Pacific Foundation at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver in December 2006, Globalization and World Poverty at the Annual Meetings of the American Economic Association in Chicago in January 2007, Global Structural Imbalances and World Economic Stability at the University of Ottowa in January 2007, and The Globalization Revolution at the University of Michigan in February 2007.

He was Visiting Professor, University of Rome in Summer 1991 (La Sapienza) and 1992, 2003-2006 (Tor Vergata), University of Triest in 1996-2002, LUM (Free University of the Mediterranean) 1996-2004, and University of Vienna in Springs 1995-2003. Visiting Professor Shangahi Finance University, Hunan University, and American University in Cairo, Spring 2007.

Consultant: Several Major Multinational Corporation and Global Banks.
Organized more than 50 panels at the Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association, which included: Robert Barro, William Baumol, Jagdish Bhagwati, Robert Baldwin, Alan Blinder, William Branson, Richard Cooper, Max Corden, Rudi Dornbusch, Martin Feldstein, Jacob Frenkel, Arnold Harberger, Otmar Issing, Dale Jorgenson, Peter Kenen, Lawrence Klein, Paul Krugman, Ronald McKinnon, Robert Mundell, Michael Mussa, Dani Rodrik, Ken Rogoff, Paul Romer, Joseph Stiglitz, and Lawrence Summers.
Top of the Page
____________________________________________________________________________

Author: Dominick Salvatore
Site last modified: January 2007.
©2007 Fordham University. All rights reserved.