Robert Z. Aliber

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Robert Z. Aliber
BornSeptember 19, 1930
Academic background
Cambridge University
  • Williams College
  • Academic work
    Disciplineeconomics
    Sub-disciplineinternational economics
    InstitutionsUniversity of Chicago
    Main interestsforeign direct investment

    Robert Zelwin Aliber (born September 19, 1930) is a professor emeritus of

    Finance at the University of Chicago.[1] He is best known for his contribution to the theory of foreign direct investment. He has given the concept of foreign exchange rate in foreign direct investment. Aliber argues that a multinational corporation from hard currency area can borrow at lower rates in a soft currency country than can local firms.[citation needed
    ]

    Life

    Aliber received a Bachelor of Arts degree from

    Cambridge University. He received his Ph.D. from Yale University. He has been a staff economist at the Commission on Money and Credit (1959–61) and at the Committee for Economic Development (1961–64). Aliber served as a senior economic advisor at the United States Agency for International Development (1964–65). He was appointed as an associate professor at the University of Chicago in 1964.[2]

    He is mentioned in

    Icelandic financial crisis
    several years before it happened.

    Notes

    1. ^ "Robert Aliber". The University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Retrieved 2024-03-30.
    2. ^ "Robert Z. Aliber-Wilson Center Fellow". Woodrow Wilson Center website. Retrieved on April 11, 2011

    External links