Ayşe İmrohoroğlu (born c. 1959) is a Turkish economist who is Professor of Finance and Business Economics at the USC Marshall School of Business.[5]

Ayşe İmrohoroğlu
Bornc. 1959[4]
NationalityTurkish
Academic career
FieldMacroeconomics,[1] Game theory,[2] Behavioral sciences[2]
InstitutionUSC Marshall School of Business (1989-present)
Alma mater
Doctoral
advisor
Edward C. Prescott[3]
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Biography

edit

İmrohoroğlu obtained her BS in economics from the Middle East Technical University in 1980 and PhD from the University of Minnesota in 1988 with a dissertation titled "Aggregate Implications of Liquidity Constraints" under the advisory of Edward C. Prescott. She joined the USC Marshall School of Business in 1989 as an assistant professor of Finance and Business Economics, got appointed as an associate professor of Finance and Business Economics in 1994 and has been a professor of Finance and Business Economics since 2000.[3] She was also Chair of the Department of Finance and Business Economics from 2004 to 2007.[1]

Her research interests include business cycles, inflation, unemployment insurance and social security. İmrohoroğlu received a grant from the National Science Foundation in 1992 to investigate the effects of social security programmes on economies with imperfect insurance.[1] She served as an Associate Editor (2005-2012) and as an Editor (2012-2017) of European Economic Review.[3] She was also an economic advisor to the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey from 2013 to 2015.[5]

She is married to the fellow Turkish economist at the USC Marshall School of Business Selahattin İmrohoroğlu.[4]

Selected publications

edit
Journal articles
Books
  • İmrohoroğlu, A. & İmrohoroğlu, S. (2012). The Fiscal Cliff: How America Can Avoid a Fall And Stay On Top. Ending Spending. ISBN 978-0985625511.

References

edit
edit
Interviews and speeches