Erasmus Kersting, PhD

Professor and Department Chair, Economics Villanova University

  • Villanova PA

Erasmus Kersting, PhD, is an expert on monetary policy, inflation and economic policy.

Contact

Villanova University

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Areas of Expertise

Inflation
Economic Growth
Interest Rates
Monetary Policy
Development Aid
World Bank

Biography

Dr. Erasmus Kersting is a professor of economics and the acting chair of the Department of Economics at the Villanova School of Business. His research is in the fields of development and international economics as well as macroeconomics.

Dr. Kersting's latest projects explore how American politics determine the degree of U.S. influence in international financial institutions and the impact of World Bank lending on financial markets in recipient countries. His research has been published in a range of academic journals, including the European Economic Review, the Journal of Development Economics, the Review of Economic Dynamics, the Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control and the Canadian Journal of Economics.

Dr. Kersting is a native of Germany and holds a degree in economics from the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel. He earned his doctorate in economics from Texas A&M University.

Education

Texas A&M University

PhD

Economics

Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel

Diplom

Economics

Affiliations

  • Member, American Economic Association (2006–Present)
  • Member, Verein für Socialpolitik (2016–Present)

Select Media Appearances

Trump Backs Off Threat to Fire Fed Chair Powell, as Stock Market Surges

Al Jazeera  

2025-04-23

Any move to remove Powell before the end of his term would likely send shockwaves through financial markets given the longstanding expectation that the Federal Reserve should make its decisions free of political considerations. "I would expect to see a dramatic fall in the stock and bond markets," Erasmus Kersting, an economics professor at Villanova University in Villanova, Pennsylvania, told Al Jazeera.

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Trump Keeps Finding New Ways to Terrify Wall Street

CNN  

2025-04-21

"Fighting inflation requires being non-political and non-partisan," said Erasmus Kersting, an economics professor at the Villanova School of Business. "Otherwise, the temptation to boost the economy for political gains is ever-present, and especially populist leaders have given in to that temptation all the time."

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An Economist Answers: "What Is a Tariff?"

6 ABC  

2025-04-04

With a flurry of economic updates leading the news cycle, we wanted to answer the very basic question: "What is a tariff?" "A tariff essentially is very much like a tax on a particular good," says Professor Erasmus Kersting, chair of Villanova University's economics department.

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Select Academic Articles

How Do Stock Markets in Emerging Economies Respond to World Bank Loan Approvals?

Emerging Markets Review

2024

This paper examines the impact of World Bank loan approvals on equity markets in borrowing countries. We exploit a rich dataset with World Bank loan commitments and daily stock market returns for 47 emerging markets, allowing us to study short-run market reactions to news about World Bank programs. These programs fall into three categories: investment projects, structural adjustment loans that tie future macroeconomic reforms to future loan disbursements (prior to FY2006) and development policy loans that reward completed macroeconomic reforms with current loan disbursements (since FY2006). Event study analysis shows positive abnormal stock market returns on the trading day following investment project loan announcements.

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Do Domestic Politics Shape U.S. Influence in the World Bank?

The Review of International Organizations

2018

Do United States presidential administrations exert more informal influence over international financial institutions when they face an uncooperative Congress and thus have less control over bilateral aid? Reexamining four empirical studies of the World Bank, we demonstrate that U.S. informal influence is driven by years with divided U.S. government. This provides a richer picture of when and why the U.S. exerts influence in multilateral settings and an alternate explanation to persistent questions about the role of international organizations in the international political economy.

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With a Little Help From My Friends: Global Electioneering and World Bank Lending

Journal of Development Economics

2016

This paper investigates how World Bank lending responds to upcoming elections in borrowing countries. We find that investment project loans disburse faster when countries are aligned with the United States in the United Nations. Moreover, disbursement accelerates in the run-up to competitive executive elections if the government is geopolitically aligned with the U.S. but decelerates if the government is not. These disbursement patterns are consistent with global electioneering that serves U.S. foreign policy interests but jeopardizes the development effectiveness of multilateral lending.

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