Hashmat U. Khan

B.A., M.A. (Delhi), Ph.D. (British Columbia)

Associate Professor (Economics)


Office: D-891 Loeb, 613-520-2600 x 1561

E-mail: hashmat_khan [at] carleton [dot] ca

Web site: http://www.carleton.ca/~hashkhan/

Languages spoken other than English: Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi


Research fields: macroeconomics, business cycles


Expertise:
• nominal and real rigidities
• DSGE models
• sources of business cycles

Selected publications:


“Investment Shocks and the Comovement Problem” (with John Tsoukalas), Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Vol. 35, No. 1 (January 2011), pp. 115–130.

“Investment Adjustment Costs: An Empirical Assessment” (with Charlotta Groth), Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Vol. 42, No. 8 (December 2010), pp. 1469–1494 (lead article).

“The Phillips Curve under State-Dependent Pricing” (with Hasan Bakhshi and Barbara Rudolf), Journal of Monetary Economics, Vol. 54, No. 8 (November 2007), pp. 2321–2345.

“Estimates of the Sticky-Information Phillips Curve for the United States” (with Zhenhua Zhu), Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, Vol. 38, No. 1 (February 2006), pp. 195–207.

“New Phillips Curve under Alternative Production Technologies for Canada, the United States, and the Euro Area” (with Edith Gagnon), European Economic Review, Vol. 49, No. 6 (August 2005), pp. 1571–1602.


Short biography:

Hashmat Khan received his B.A. from the University of Delhi and his M.A. from the Delhi School of Economics in India, and his Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia. He has undertaken research on a range of topics in macroeconomics such as pricing behaviour, inflation dynamics, and output, investment, and exchange-rate fluctuations. His research has been published in journals such as the Canadian Journal of Economics, the European Economic Review, the Journal of Monetary Economics, the Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, the Journal of Macroeconomics, and Economics Letters. He has held a Senior Economist position at the Bank of England and a Research Analyst position at the Bank of Canada.