Texas A&M International University. April 11-13, 2018 Laredo, Texas, USA

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Economic historian Peter H. Lindert is the Distinguished Professor of Economics at the University of California, Davis. Dr. Lindert is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. His works on the welfare state and inequality include his prize-winning book, Growing Public: Social Spending and Economic Growth since the Eighteenth Century (Cambridge University Press 2004), and the book Unequal Gains: American Growth and Inequality since 1700 (Princeton University Press 2016, co-authored with Jeffrey Williamson). Dr. Lindert earned an A.B. from Princeton University s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, and a Ph.D. from Cornell University. Wednesday, April 11, 2018 Evening Keynote Address 7:30 p.m. Income inequality has been rising since the 1970s, especially in the United States. Are conservative changes in government policy contributing to this inequality, or have policy changes brought relief from rising inequality? New data suggest that although the U.S. government, like Britain and others, has been helping the richest slightly by cutting top tax rates, they have continued to help the poor and near-poor with better safety nets. Public education has also acted as a growing long-run equalizer of incomes. The net effect of policies that show up in the government budget has been slightly pro-poor, checking part of the rise of inequality. If the changes in government spending and taxes did not make Americans more unequal, what did? Global market forces, mostly. Part of the answer has been that government policies toward trade and immigration have stood aside, letting market globalization foster growth while widening the income gaps within this country. Ironically, the pro-growth refusal to shelter workers against the globalization of trade and labor markets started as a Republican policy preference, but Republicans have now become the more protectionist party at the expense of world income growth.

Ambassador Carmen Domínguez, currently Deputy Permanent Representative (DPR) of Chile to the United Nations, has been a career foreign service officer since 1991. She has served as Economic Officer at the Embassy of Chile in the United States (1995 2000), was DPR for the Mission of Chile to the WTO (2002 2006), as well as Economic Adviser at the Embassy of Chile in Peru (2008 2010), and DPR for the Mission of Chile to the OECD (2011 2013). In Chile, she has been Trade Policy Adviser to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Chief of Staff to the Vice Minister, and Director for Strategic Planning. Domínguez earned a B.A. from Bowdoin College (U.S.), an LLM with honors in International Economic Law from the University of Warwick (U.K.), and a Mid-Career MPA from Harvard University s Kennedy School of Government. She is also a graduate of Chile s Diplomatic Academy and is a Yale World Fellow. She has lectured and taught at various universities and academic programs, has participated in numerous international conferences and written articles and columns for academic journals and the media. Thursday, April 12, 2018 Luncheon Keynote Address 12 noon Stephen Meardon will have a discussion with Ambassador Domínguez which will focus on her career in the Chilean foreign service; economic development in Chile, and how Chilean foreign policy has sought to foster it. How these considerations inform her understanding of the objectives of trade policy and the strategy of trade negotiations; and her views on the connection (especially the political connection) between international trade and income inequality.

Luis Rubio is chairman of the Mexican Council on Foreign Relations and México Evalua-CIDAC, an independent research institution devoted to the study of economic and political policy issues. Winner of the APRA Book Award in 1985, in 1993 he was given the Dag Hammarskjöld Award and in 1998 the National Journalism Award for op-ed pieces. Rubio is a prolific writer on political, economic, and international subjects. He is a contributing editor of Reforma, and his analyses and opinions often appear in major newspapers and journals in México, the US, and Europe (The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, International Herald Tribune, Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, and National Public Radio). He is author and editor of 49 books, including A World of Opportunities; The Problem of Power: Mexico Requires a New System of Government; A Mexican Utopia: The Rule of Law is Possible; NAFTA at Twenty: A Political and Strategic Perspective; and Mexico: A Middle Class Society, Poor No More, Developed Not Yet. Before joining CIDAC, in the 1970's he was planning director of Citibank in México and served as an adviser to México's Secretary of the Treasury. He holds a diploma in financial management, a M.M.B.A., and his M.A. and Ph.D. in political science are from Brandeis University. Friday, April 13, 2018 Luncheon Keynote Address 1 p.m. México is in the midst of a presidential contest which has revived an old divide: openness vs. autarky; closeness with the US vs. distance; democracy vs. governmental controls. In contrast with nations like Chile or Spain, which experienced democratic transitions from a dictatorship embodied by one person, México has liberalized without becoming a fully modern, democratic, and market society and economy. Paradoxically, both migration to the north as well as NAFTA helped sustain and make viable an unfinished transition process which has now hit a wall. The US has a fundamental interest in this process, but the Trump administration has taken a distant view of a geopolitical reality, further complicating the ongoing electoral contest.

Hans-Michael Trautwein is a professor of international economics at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg in Germany. Currently, he also serves as Director of the Centre of Transnational Studies (ZenTra) of the Universities Bremen and Oldenburg, and as President of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought (ESHET). Trautwein s research interests comprise theoretical, empirical, and historical studies of monetary integration and financial markets, transnational governance, and the evolution of macroeconomic thinking, in particular along the lines of Wicksell, Keynes, and Schumpeter. Trautwein has published widely in international journals and collected volumes. His books include A Short History of Economic Thought (written together with Bo Sandelin and Richard Wundrak), Thought on Economic Development in China (edited with Ying Ma), and Peripheral Visions of Economic Development (edited with Mario García Molina). He is also a managing editor of the European Journal of the History of Economic Thought. Dr. Phillip W. Magness is an economic historian specializing in the long 19th Century United States, as well as general fiscal trends in the 19th and 20th centuries. His broader research extends to the economic history of the United States and includes historical tariff policy, the federal income tax, the relationship between taxation and wealth inequality, and the political economy of slavery. He is currently a visiting assistant professor of economics at Berry College in Rome, GA for the 2017-18 term. Thursday, April 12, 2018 Panel Presentation 2 p.m.

Dr. George R. G. Clarke is the BBVA Compass Bank Group Distinguished Chair of International Economics and Finance at the A. R. Sanchez, Jr. School of Business, Texas A&M International University. He is currently the editor of The International Trade Journal. His academic research focuses on privatization and competition in banking and infrastructure and on the impact of corruption on firm performance and growth. He has published over 40 papers in academic journals and books including in the Journal of Development Economics, Journal of Public Economics, Journal of Comparative Economics, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, and Journal of Law and Economics. Before joining Texas A&M International University, he was a senior private sector development specialist at the World Bank. While at the World Bank, he worked in the Africa Region, the Europe and Central Asia Region, and the Development Research Group. He was also one of the core team members that wrote the 2005 World Development Report: A Better Investment Climate for Everyone. He received his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Rochester and his BA in Mathematics and Economics from Cornell University. Friday, April 13, 2018 10:30 a.m.