Moritz Schularick is a Fellow at the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and professor of economics at the University of Bonn. He was previously a professor at the John F. Kennedy Institute of the Free University of Berlin, Germany, a visiting scholar at Cambridge University, and worked in the financial industry for several years. His current work focuses on credit cycles, the determinants of financial crises, and the international monetary system. Together with Niall Ferguson, he coined the term “Chimerica” to describe the intimate financial relations between the United States and China. Working at the crossroads of monetary and international economics as well as economic history, his contributions can be found in the American Economic Review, the Quarterly Journal of Economics, the Journal of Monetary Economics, the Journal of International Economics, the Journal of Economic History, and several other journals.
Moritz Schularick

- Leader of Private Debt
- Leader of Finance and the Welfare of Nations: The View from Economic History
By this expert
Rates of Return on Everything: A New Database

Returns on wealth exceed growth for more countries, more years, and more dramatically than Piketty has found
When the Middle Class Lost Its Wealth

Until 2008, rising home values gave the middle class a cushion amid growing income inequality. But following the financial crisis, that wealth has failed to return.
The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015
This paper answers fundamental questions that have preoccupied modern economic thought since the 18th century.
Inside the Great Leveraging
This paper discusses what we have learned about the debt build-up in advanced societies over the past century. It shows that the extraordinary growth of aggregate debt in the past century was driven by the private sector.
Featuring this expert
How the Stock Market Drives Wealth Inequality

When the stock market grows faster than the housing market, the gains of the top 1% outpace those of the middle class
NextGen Private Debt Initiative

Shaped by the 2008 financial crisis, a new generation of economists is expanding the boundaries of economic thinking on credit cycles, private debt, and financial stability.
Reawakening From the Origins of Economic Ideas to the Challenges of Our Time

INET gathered hundreds of new economic thinkers in Edinburgh to discuss the past, present, and future of the economics profession.