間眅埶AV

Notable Alumni

David Andolfatto

Senior Vice President, Economics Research division at Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

MA Economics, 1987
BBA, 1985

"People from all walks of life are interested in Economics says Dr. David Andolfatto, 間眅埶AV economics alumnus and former economics professor at 間眅埶AV.

Andolfatto's primary role as Vice President is to advise James Bullard, the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and otherwise support the activities that take place within the research division. He is a member of the senior Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) council at the St. Louis Fed. He coordinates FOMC briefings, which are designed to help the President prepare for the upcoming meetings Washington D.C. Apart from his advisory duties, Andolfatto is expected to work on research for policy discussions. President Bullard takes economic research very seriously and believes, along with the rest of us, that frontier research can and should be brought to bear on contemporaneous policy debates. My experiences here have affected my research program profoundly, says Andolfatto.

Andolfatto also connects with the general public through opinion articles, Twitter, and a personal blog, MacroMania. Economics as not an easy subject but people want to understand it, however economists do not have all the answers. He explains we dont know, but we have some ideas, some probably better than yours, not because were any smarter than you, but because weve spent a lot longer studying the subject than you have. On why Andolfatto reaches out to the general public, he further clarifies, I want people to be well-informed about the nature of economic debates. I want people to know how to identify illogical or ideological arguments and to know where legitimate scientific disagreement exists.

Although David Andolfatto is adding to the policy discussion at a global level, his interest in economics started at 間眅埶AV in 1983. He was inspired to pursue economics by taking a Canadian economics policy course, taught by Professor Herbert Grubel (2004 winner of the Nora and Ted Sterling Prize in support of controversy). I entered that class with a particular philosophical disposition that Grubel proceeded to dismantle lecture by lecture, Dr. Andolfatto goes on, I remember feeling shocked and fascinated at this new way of thinking of things. He made me drink from the elixir of economic reasoning. I was hooked from then on. After completing his BBA degree at 間眅埶AV, Dr. Andolfatto completed his MA degree in Economics at 間眅埶AV, and went onto complete his PhD at Western University.

Andolfatto came back to 間眅埶AV in 2000 and now teaches economics graduate courses, upper and lower undergraduate courses. His passion for teaching shows in his enthusiasm for his students, to help the students prepare for an upcoming exam, some of my teaching assistants decided to hold office hours collectively in a vacant classroom. I have pictures of my assistants patiently answering questions from eager students. The blackboard was full of equations and diagrams. As I looked on, I remember feeling so proud of these young people.

For those passionate students interested in economics and discovering the area they are most passionate about Andolfatto recommends to open your eyes, propose questions and let those questions inspire you into your research. He states If one is devoted to a lifetime to study, you may as well devote it to questions that you personally find puzzling. David Andolfatto recommends to those future students to read a lot of history, familiarize yourself with plenty of data and to keep an open mind and dont be afraid to change your mind if the theory and evidence tells you too.

Last updated August 31, 2017