• Current Faculty & Staff
  • Current Students
  • Alumni
  • Give to Carey
  • Contact Us
  • Who We Are
  • Our Programs
  • Admissions
  • Faculty & Research
  • News & Events
  • Partners & Recruiters
Faculty & Research

Eileen Mauskopf Faculty Bio

Eileen Mauskopf

Eileen Mauskopf, PhD
Associate Professor

The Johns Hopkins Carey Business School
100 International Drive
Baltimore, MD 21202

Eileen Mauskopf, PhD (Economics, Johns Hopkins University), joined the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School in 2011. She is an Associate Professor in the practice track with expertise in macroeconomics, monetary economics, and real estate economics.

Honors and Distinctions

  • 1976-2011 - Senior Economist, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
  • 2006 - Advisor, Central Bank of Israel
  • 1997 - Technical Advisor for the International Monetary Fund at the Czech National Bank
  • 1994-95 - Senior Economist, Council of Economic Advisors
  • 1989 - Advisor, Australian Department of Treasury
  • 1988 - Visiting Professor, University of New South Wales
  • 1973-76 - Assistant Professor, Rutgers University Department of Economics

Selected Publications

  • "The Incentives of Mortgage Servicers and Designing Loan Modifications to Address the Mortgage Crisis" (with L. Cordell, K. Dynan, A. Lehnert, and N. Liang), chapter in Lessons from the Financial Crisis: Causes, Consequences, and Our Economic Future, 2010
  • "Designing Loan Modifications to Address the Mortgage Crisis and the Making Home Affordable Program" (with L. Cordell, K. Dynan, A. Lehnert, and N. Liang), Uniform Commercial Code Law Journal, 2009
  • "A Simple Proposal for Government Help to Distressed Homeowners" (with C. Foote, J. Fuhrer, and P. Willen), Public Policy Briefs, 2009
  • "Dynamic Sourcing, Fiscal Policy, and the Short-Run Behavior of the Macroeconomy" (with D. Reifschneider), National Tax Journal, 1997
  • "The Transmission Channels of Monetary Policy: How Have They Changed?" Federal Reserve Bulletin, 1990

Teaching Interests

  • Macroeconomics, monetary economics, and real estate economics