Tim Duy PhD
About Tim Duy PhD
Professor Duy received his B.A. in Economics in 1991 from the University of Puget Sound, and his M.S. and Ph.D. in Economics in 1998 from the University of Oregon. Following graduate school, Tim worked in Washington, D.C. for the United States Department of Treasury as an economist in the International Affairs division and later with the G7 Group, a political and economic consultancy for clients in the financial industry. In the latter position, he was responsible for monitoring the activities of the Federal Reserve and currency markets. Tim returned to the University of Oregon in 2002. He is the Senior Director of the Oregon Economic Forum and the author of the University of Oregon Statewide Economic Indicators, Regional Economic Indicators, and the Central Oregon Business Index. Tim has published in the Journal of Economics and Business and is currently a member of the Oregon Governor's Council of Economic Advisors and the State Debt Policy Advisory Commission.
Archive
| 05/13/2013 | Implications of Fed Tightening for Equities | Article |
| 05/02/2013 | FOMC Leaves Policy Unchanged | Article |
| 04/22/2013 | Monetary Policy and Financial Stability | Article |
| 04/18/2013 | Bullard Concerned About Low Inflation | Article |
| 04/17/2013 | Austerity Research Fail | Article |
| 04/15/2013 | When Can We All Admit the Euro Is an Economic Failure? | Article |
| 03/27/2013 | Fedspeak on Both Sides of the Atlantic | Article |
| 03/22/2013 | The Recovery Is Real | Article |
| 03/18/2013 | The War on Common Sense Continues | Article |
| 02/21/2013 | Fed’s Commitment In Question | Article |
| 02/20/2013 | And the Pressure on the Bank of Japan Rises | Article |
| 12/10/2012 | Is the U.S. Already in Recession? | Article |
| 12/06/2012 | Monetary Policy to Become Easier Next Week? | Article |
| 10/26/2012 | Still the Scariest Data | Article |
| 08/24/2012 | Dueling Fed Presidents | Article |
| 08/22/2012 | Chances of QE3 Diminishing | Article |
| 06/15/2012 | Devil’s Advocate | Article |
| 06/13/2012 | Easing Seems Likely, But of What Form? | Article |


