Jeffrey Rosensweig

Associate Professor of Finance; Director, The Robson Program for Business, Public Policy, and Government

  • Atlanta GA UNITED STATES

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Biography

Jeff Rosensweig is an associate professor of International Business and Finance. He is also Director of the Global Perspectives Program. Jeff specializes in global strategy, global economics, and international finance. Prior to joining Emory in January 1988, he was Senior International Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Jeff has also taught at M.I.T. and in the economics department and the School of Management at Yale University. Jeff's research into global trends leads to frequent keynote lectures to business and academic audiences. His current research focuses on three main topics. First --business linkages with the emerging global economy. Second -- the implications of globally divergent demographic trends for business. Third -- factors affecting competition in the global travel and tourism industry.

Education

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

PhD

International and Monetary Economics

1985

Oxford University

MA

Philosophy, Politics and Economics

1981

Yale University

BA & MA

Economics

1979

Areas of Expertise

Business Strategy in a Global Economy
Global Economic Trends and Linkages
International Finance

Publications

Medical Tourism: Globalization of the Health Care Marketplace

MedGenMed: Medscape General Medicine

2007

The citizens of many countries have long traveled to the United States and to the developed countries of Europe to seek the expertise and advanced technology available in leading medical centers. In the recent past, a trend known as medical tourism has emerged wherein citizens of highly developed countries choose to bypass care offered in their own communities and travel to less developed areas of the world to receive a wide variety of medical services. Medical tourism is becoming increasingly popular, and it is projected that as many as 750,000 Americans will seek offshore medical care in 2007. This phenomenon is driven by marketplace forces and occurs outside of the view and control of the organized healthcare system. Medical tourism presents important concerns and challenges as well as potential opportunities. This trend will have increasing impact on the healthcare landscape in industrialized and developing countries around the world.

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FISCAL POLICY AND TRADE ADJUSTMENT: ARE THE DEFICITS REALLY TWINS?

Economic Inquiry

1993-10-01

Since the mid 1980s, an extensive emprical literature has examined the relationship between U.S. Fiscal deficits, exchange rates, and trade balances. We investigate two questions that continue to spark debate: do increased government deficits casue doller appreciation, and do fiscal deficits lead to higher trade deficits (the popular ‘twin deficit’ notion)? We examine these issues fusing a five-variable VAR system, generating posterior probability bounds to assess significance. Our result provide some evidence that growing goverment deficits apperciate the dollar, and support the “twin deficit” notion that government deficits contrinute to trade deficits.

Elasticities of substitution in Caribbean tourism

Elsevier B.V.

1988-07-01

This paper constructs a three-level CES model and estimates the effect of real exchange rates on competition for tourism earnings. Elasticities of substitution are estimated, first intra-Caribbean, then among regional aggregates. A worldwide and a U.S. market are both estimated. U.S. tourists substitute relatively more interregionally, but less intra-Caribbean. Significant effects of political violence are also captured. Development policy options are examined, including the role of parallel tourism exchange rates and Caribbean collusion.

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Research Spotlight

1 min

Time to talk tariffs

Need to understand trade wars and tariffs? Goizueta's Jeff Rosensweig can explain. "These foreign nations that we're going to put these import taxes on, these tariffs, are not stupid," he tells NPR. "They're going to retaliate against our exports, and they're going to hit us where it hurts, which is often our farm exports."Source:

Jeffrey Rosensweig

In the News

US and Canada reach deal on NAFTA after talks go down to the wire

CNN  online

2018-10-01

"We have really hurt relationships with our major ally ... for the sake of a few gallons of milk," Jeffrey Rosensweig, a business professor at Emory University, said on CNN.

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David Abney: The UPS boss who rose from the bottom rung

BBC News  

2016-08-22

But as Jeffrey Rosensweig, a business professor at Emory University in Atlanta, points out, the culture of jumping from company to company to secure promotions doesn't fit with either UPS or Mr Abney.

Instead people are loyal to the business, and the successful move around a lot internally.

"It's a culture [at UPS] that has more in common with Japanese culture, or military culture, where, if you are doing well, they move you so that you learn more of the business," says Prof Rosensweig...

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Population Density Soon to be Bright Spot for Dairy Industry

Dairy Reporter  

2016-02-05

There's a bright future for those in the dairy industry, according to a professor from the Goizueta Business School at Emory University.

Jeffrey Rosensweig, Director of the Global Perspectives Program at the school, told a group of dairy professionals at a breakfast session titled "The Global and U.S. Economic-Forecast: Implications for the Dairy Industry" at the 2016 IDFA Dairy Forum that the food and dairy industries have "a much brighter future than most industries."

"The world is adding 77m people a year; don't listen to all the doomsday people about how the economy is slow," he said "Across the world wealth is being generated at higher [levels]."...

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