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Tunku Varadarajan

Tunku Varadarajan joined New York University Stern School of Business as a Clinical Professor of Business in October 2007.

Prior to joining NYU Stern, Professor Varadarajan was an Assistant Managing Editor at The Wall Street Journal. During his tenure there he also served as the editorial features, or op-ed, editor, as well as chief television and media critic. Previously, he worked as an editorial writer for The Times of London, as well as its bureau chief in both Madrid and New York City. He currently serves as a contributing editor at the Financial Times.

From 1988 to 1993, Professor Varadarajan was the Levine Memorial Lecturer in Law at Trinity College, Oxford University. Additionally, he has taught as an adjunct professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.

Professor Varadarajan has a B.A. in Law, with honors, from Oxford University.

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Thomas Grennes Thoughts From Across the Atlantic

Thomas Grennes is a professor of economics at the North Carolina State University and a former visiting faculty member at the Stockholm School of Economics in Riga. His research has dealt with various aspects of international economics, including open economy macroeconomics, international finance, and international trade in agricultural products. Recent research topics have included macroeconomic aspects of the Great Moderation, offshore outsourcing, sovereign wealth funds, and the relationship between government debt and economic growth. Earlier work dealt with emerging market issues in the Baltic countries and Russia and trade and macro policies in Sub-Saharan Africa. Economic history topics include the Columbian Exchange of plants and animals, the effects on food markets of introducing mechanical refrigeration, and the integration of Tsarist Russia into the world grain market. When he is not involved in economics, he enjoys mountain hiking.

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