International Finance Staff | Program Direction
Brian M. Doyle
Project Manager
Division of International Finance
Contact Information
202-785-6011
brian.m.doyle@frb.gov
Fields of Interest
Open Economy Macroeconomics
International Finance
Macroeconomics
Education
Ph.D., Economics, Princeton University, 1999
M.A., Economics, Princeton University, 1996
B.A., Economics, Queen's University at Kingston, 1994
Professional Experience
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 1999-present
Adjunct Professor, Syracuse University, 2002-2002
Adjunct Professor, Johns Hopkins University, 2001-2005
Selected Publications
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Monetary Policy and the Housing Bubble
(with Jane Dokko, Michael Kiley, Jinill Kim, and others),
Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2009-49. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 2009.
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''Breaks in the Variability and Co-Movement of G-7 Economic Growth''
(with Jon Faust),
Review of Economics and Statistics, vol. 87
(November 2005), pp. 721-740.
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House Prices and Monetary Policy: A Cross-Country Study
(with John Ammer, Linda Kole, Robert Martin, and others),
International Finance Discussion Papers 843. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 2005.
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''International Coordination of Macroeconomic Policies: Still Alive in the New Millennium?''
(with Laurence H. Meyer, Joseph E. Gagnon, and Dale W. Henderson), in
David Vines and Christopher L. Gilbert, eds.,
The IMF and its Critics: Reform of Global Financial Architecture. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
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''An Investigation of Co-movements among the Growth Rates of G-7 Countries''
(with Jon Faust),
Federal Reserve Bulletin,
vol. 88 (October 2002), pp. 427-437.
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''New Keynesian, Open-Economy Model and Their Implications for Monetary Policy''
(with David Bowman), in
Price Adjustment and Monetary Policy, proceedings of a conference held by the Bank of Canada. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Bank of Canada, 2002.
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'Here, Dollars, Dollars...' -- Estimating Currency Demand and Worldwide Currency Substitution,
International Finance Discussion Papers 657. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 2000.
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