Michael McMahon
@mcmahonecon.bsky.social
1.6K followers 470 following 32 posts
Macro Prof @ Oxford Econ. Member of Ireland’s Fiscal Council and otherwise spend my work time thinking about central banks, communication and inventories!
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mcmahonecon.bsky.social
I regularly take seminar visitors for the short walk to see the grave. It gets them out in the fresh air, and I get to mention others buried there like John Fleming and Kenneth Graham (Bank of England employee who wrote Wind in the Willows).
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
Today marks the 180th anniversary of the birth of great Irish/Oxford economist Francis Ysidro Edgeworth.

Most remembered now by students for the Edgeworth Box, he was the founding editor of the Economic Journal and is buried less than 400 feet from the Economics Dept with a beautiful Celtic cross.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
Another great converts to #EconSky

@jagjitchadha.bsky.social - give him a follow.
Reposted by Michael McMahon
arunadvani.bsky.social
🚨PRE-DOC OPPORTUNITY🚨
If you are
🔸considering a future in #econ research, via a PhD or other paths (thinktanks, civil service);
🔸interested in studying Qs abt tax, growth & ineq;
then come work w/me, @andy-summers.bsky.social + @centaxuk.bsky.social team
econjobmarket.org/positions/11...
#econ_ra
Card explaining some of the benefits of working at CenTax as a Research Economist/pre-doc. These include co-authoring academic papers and policy briefings, getting media exposure, and a structured path into PhD programmes and other economics research careers
Reposted by Michael McMahon
susiedent.com
Word of the day is most definitely ‘hurkle-durkling’ (19th-century Scots): to linger in bed long after it’s time to get up.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
👍🏻 Makes sense you can lock them but I haven’t a musical bone in my body and hence I’m probably not allowed within many metres of such grand instruments.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
Naivety incoming - I had no idea you could lock pianos! Is it the piano itself or is there a locking mechanism on those covers?
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
Speculatively, they could refuse to carry out their duty (presumably claiming they don’t have legal jurisdiction) or they could carry out their duty and claim they failed to meet standards (blocking the bond).

Either leads to discrimination claims (especially as they already approved previously).
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
It’s a duty as a member of EU. Of course, if they somehow didn’t do it (not a lawyer so don’t know how this happens or consequences for CBoI), then another authority could do it and there is no change for sale of bonds.

So while it is definitely is against public opinion, it isn’t a choice as such.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
Ireland is the “Home Member State” for Israeli bonds in the EU. Israel chooses which state it designates (was UK until Brexit). Once chosen, CBoI is the competent authority that has to check their bond prospectuses comply with rules (“approve them”).

www.centralbank.ie/regulation/i...
Prospectus Regulation | Central Bank of Ireland
Page provides an outlined of the Central Bank’s obligations under the provisions of the Prospectus Regulations
www.centralbank.ie
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
Are you hiring on the Econ Job market seeking someone who does macro and applied experimental? Look no further than my @oxfordecondept.bsky.social student Alena Wabitsch. She works on expectation formation, mon policy, and labour. She has already published some papers and won awards.

bit.ly/499n7QK
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
Expect the productivity of #EconSky to rise impressively - TFP legend @johnfernald.bsky.social has entered the mix. 😁

Especially after the earlier hit from @overleaf.com going down!

(Actually lots of great economists continue to join.)
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
By this stage of their career they are high-ranking politicians who are charged with selecting and implementing the policies desired by the government.

I prefer to live in a world where it is these selected policies that people focus on, discuss and criticise.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
I have said before that I think it is useful to have someone with economics training in the position of Chancellor. It makes them better consumers of the briefings they receive and they can challenge views on their desired policies. But...
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
What to say on Halifax period? I don't know in the sense that I wasn't there. But many people who train as economists go into other areas of the world and bring their economics training to usefully bear on those areas. I'm Ok that they can still think of themselves as economists.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
So what does it mean to suggest that she was a junior analyst? Or didn't stand out? Having sat in meetings with Rachel over many years, she was doing the same thing I and other junior people were doing - learning from more senior people in our divisions and the whole MA area.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
She absolutely was an macroeconomist - not because of her training but because of what she did day to day. We analysed international macroeconomies and I think we were in a great environment for learning. And we were learning - UG and MSc does not train you as a macroeconomist.
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
As background-I was also at the @bankofengland.bsky.social at the same time as Rachel and we worked under Governor Bailey in IEAD. We were both new to the job. We also had similar training (UG econ and then MSc from LSE). I may also be considered biased since I now work @oxfordecondept.bsky.social .
mcmahonecon.bsky.social
I haven't said anything on the Chancellor's CV discussion (I was travelling and not paying deep attention). I spoke to Jagjit Chadha but now non-economist friends have mentioned it to me so I wanted to say publicly what I have said to them privately: This is a ridiculous attack.