He authored China’s position, role and strategy in the WTO (published by The Press of UIBE, 2005) and published a number of papers and chapters in books. His research and teaching focus on Chinese trade policy, WTO, Government procurement, US trade policy, and US-China trade relations. He was also a visiting scholar at SWP(German Institute of International and Security Affairs), Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterrey, and Indiana University on a variety of trade topics. He conducted his research on the GPA under the WTO Secretariat for three months in 2011. In the summer of 2009, he was invited as a visiting fellow by the Korea Institute for International Economic Policy (KIEP). During 2006-2007, he was a visiting scholar at the School of Advanced International Studies of Johns Hopkins University. in international trade from this university in 2004. TU Xinquan is Dean and Professor of the China Institute for WTO Studies of University of International Business and Economics located in Beijing, China Bown received a BA magna cum laude in economics and international relations from Bucknell University and a PhD in economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has also spent a year in residence as a visiting scholar in economic research at the World Trade Organization (WTO) Secretariat in Geneva. Bown was a tenured professor of economics at Brandeis University, where he held a joint appointment in the Department of Economics and International Business School for 12 years. Bown previously served as senior economist for international trade and investment in the White House on the Council of Economic Advisers and most recently as a lead economist at the World Bank, conducting research and advising developing country governments on international trade policy for seven years. His research examines international trade laws and institutions, trade negotiations, and trade disputes. Bown, Reginald Jones Senior Fellow since March 2018, joined the Peterson Institute for International Economics as a senior fellow in April 2016. in Economics and Agricultural Economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.Ĭhad P. He was previously an agricultural economist in the Economic Research Service of the U.S. He received Treasury’s Meritorious Service Award for contributions to the negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and to the 2015 renewal of Trade Promotion Authority.īefore joining the IMF, Brad was a Trade Policy Analyst in the GATT and WTO Secretariat (1993-96), where he prepared Trade Policy Reviews and contributed to the Secretariat’s numerical analysis of the effects of the Uruguay Round. Treasury’s Office of Trade Policy and Financial Services Negotiations and represented Treasury on the inter-agency U.S. Government Senior Executive Service from 2013-16, Brad led the U.S. Since joining the IMF in 1997, he has also served on various IMF country teams in Europe, central Asia, and Africa reviewed IMF lending programs for low-income countries and served as IMF Representative to the WTO and Head of the IMF’s Geneva Office.Īs a member of the U.S. Among other projects, he was the IMF lead on joint IMF-WB-WTO policy papers in 2017 ( Making Trade an Engine of Growth for All ) and 2018 ( Reinvigorating Trade and Inclusive Growth), and the recent joint IMF-OECD-WB-WTO paper ( Subsidies, Trade, and International Cooperation ). Brad McDonald is Deputy Chief for Trade Policy in the IMF External Policies Division, where he is responsible for IMF-wide policy and guidance on global trade policy issues and advises IMF country teams.
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