Influential economist Stanley Fischer dies - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

Influential economist Stanley Fischer dies

Former policymaker at the Federal Reserve, IMF and World Bank also taught generations of students

Stanley Fischer, a former top policymaker at the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of Israel whose thinking was highly influential among generations of economists, has died at the age of 81.

A former vice-chair of the Fed, Fischer also served at the IMF, where as first deputy managing director he worked on the response to the Asian and Russian crises of the late 1990s. He also served as chief economist at the World Bank. 

Fischer’s death was announced on Sunday by the Bank of Israel, where he served as governor from 2005 to 2013. The country’s president Isaac Herzog paid tribute to him as “a world-class professional, a man of integrity, with a heart of gold”. 

While he attained some of the most senior positions in global economics, Fischer’s career was no less significant because of his academic and teaching work, including at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 

Former European Central Bank president Mario Draghi and former Fed chair Ben Bernanke were among the students whose PhD dissertations he helped supervise. 

“The human dimension of Stan’s work was as impressive and impactful as his brilliant economic analysis and his remarkable communication skills,” said Mohamed El-Erian, president of Queens’ College Cambridge and chief economic adviser at Allianz. 

“This quality was consistently evident — whether in his approach to individual country reform cases, his pursuit of a comprehensive, durable, and just peace in the Middle East or his contributions to the functioning of the international economic order.”

Born in the 1940s in Zambia when it was the UK protectorate of Northern Rhodesia, Fischer was the son of Philip, a Jewish immigrant from Latvia who owned a country store in the town of Mazabuka, and Ann, who was born in Cape Town and was the daughter of Lithuanian immigrants.

Fischer later recalled growing up surrounded by farmers with the influence of colonialism prominent in his upbringing. “I am a product of the British empire, there is no question about it,” he told the Financial Times in 2017. His family later moved to Southern Rhodesia, where as a teenager he got to know his future wife Rhoda, who died in 2020.

Fischer studied economics at the London School of Economics, launching an academic career that would also take him to MIT, where he received a PhD in economics in 1969 and ultimately a professorship. 

His academic work in the 1970s proved to be groundbreaking as he built up the idea that activist central banks could stimulate the economy, becoming a leading figure in New Keynsian economics. His published work included the influential book Macroeconomics, co-authored with Rudi Dornbush and Richard Startz. 

He joined the World Bank in 1988 before becoming the number two official in the IMF in 1994, serving under Michel Camdessus. His period at the Fund proved to be a turbulent one with the eruption of the emerging market crises of the 1990s. 

He later moved to Citigroup, where he worked as vice-chair. A dual US-Israeli citizen, Fischer joined the Bank of Israel in 2005, where he helped steer the country through the turmoil of the global financial crisis that erupted later in the decade. 

He joined the Fed in 2014, serving on the board under Janet Yellen. His period at the Fed was marked by internal disagreements over interest rates, as Fischer advocated for a more hawkish approach to policy than Yellen.

After the first Trump administration took power in 2017 he was vocal about the risks of financial regulation being thrown into reverse, something he described as “extremely dangerous and extremely short-sighted”.

“I had a picture of the world economy in which the United States was an anchor, not a source of volatility,” Fischer said at the time.

Fischer resigned from his position at the Fed in late 2017, more than six months before the post was due to end, saying in a letter to President Donald Trump that his departure was for personal reasons. 

At the time Lawrence Summers, former US Treasury Secretary, wrote in the FT that “through his teaching, writing, advising and leading Stan has had as much influence on global money as anyone in the last generation”. 

Former IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard paid tribute to Fischer on social media on Sunday, saying: “He was an outstanding economist, an outstanding policymaker, but even more importantly, a great human being.”

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

美国将同样面临石油冲击风险

在全球原油市场上,亚洲买家正大量收购供应,推高欧洲和美国的价格。
48分钟前

战争导致的税收政策收紧将俄罗斯中小企业推至崩溃边缘

随着莫斯科将增值税提高至22%并大幅削减对中小企业的税收减免,小企业主难以维持运营。

投资者质疑OpenAI的8520亿美元估值

投资者担心,OpenAI的战略调整可能让该公司在准备上市之际更容易受到Anthropic和谷歌的冲击。

伊朗外交使命是万斯的“金杯毒酒”

长期以来一直抨击美国在海外军事干预的万斯,如今已成为推动结束这场冲突的代表人物。

历经二十年协议受挫,伊朗核僵局进一步恶化

上周末举行的直接会谈,依旧没有跳出华盛顿与德黑兰二十多年来反复上演的曲折而令人沮丧的谈判轨道。

伊朗战争会提振中国经济吗?

伊朗战争的外溢效应是否正在推高美国批发物价?英国正走向经济衰退吗?
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×