Carnegie-Rochester-NYU Conference on Public Policy

History
The Carnegie-Rochester-NYU Conference on Public Policy was initiated in the early 1970's through the efforts of the Bradley Policy Research Center at the William E. Simon School of Business Administration at the University of Rochester and the Center for the Study of Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University. Under the leadership of the late Karl Brunner (University of Rochester) and Allan Meltzer (Carnegie-Mellon University) the Conference developed into a semi-annual event occurring in April in Rochester and November in Pittsburgh.

The principal objectives of the Conferences are (a) to stimulate policy relevance and empirical research in economic science, (b) to encourage interchange of scientific ideas among analysts with different approaches, and (c) to generate greater understanding by academic economists of practitioner's environments.

Each conference tends to be organized around a particular theme or topic with papers prepared by leading scholars with expertise in the area. Participants are united by their interest in the issues discussed and by their belief that analysis, evidence, and informed discussion have lasting effects on the public and its institutions.

Advisory Board

  • Andrew Abel, University of Pennsylvania
  • Mark Aguiar, Princeton University
  • Laurence Ales, Carnegie Mellon University
  • George Alessandria, University of Rochester
  • Yan Bai, University of Rochester
  • Mark Bils, University of Rochester
  • Gian Luca Clementi, New York University
  • Harold Cole, University of Pennsylvania
  • Mariacristina De Nardi, University of Minnesota
  • Burton Hollifield, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Narayana Kocherlakota, University of Rochester
  • Marla Ripoll, University of Pittsburgh
  • Aysegul Sahin, University of Texas
  • Ali Shourideh, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Christopher Sleet, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Linda Tesar, University of Michigan
  • Venky Venkateswaran, New York University
  • Gianluca Violante, Princeton University
  • Michael Waugh, Minneapolis Fed
  • Sevin Yeltekin, University of Rochester
  • Ariel Zetlin-Jones, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Stanley E. Zin, New York University