Daniel Waldenström

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Daniel Waldenström
Born
Daniel Anders Måns Waldenström
NationalitySwedish
Occupation(s)Economist, professor
Academic background
Alma materStockholm School of Economics
Lund University
Academic work
InstitutionsResearch Institute of Industrial Economics

Daniel Anders Måns Waldenström is a Swedish economist, economic historian, and professor. He is professor of economics and program manager for the research program Taxes and society at the Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN) in Stockholm.[1]

Biography[edit]

Waldenström completed his doctorate in economics at the Stockholm School of Economics in 2003 and in economic history at Lund University in 2009. As a researcher and teacher, he has worked at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA, the Stockholm School of Economics, Uppsala University,[2] and the Paris School of Economics.[3] He joined IZA Institute of Labor Economics as a Research Fellow in October 2011.[4]

He does research on economic inequality,[5] taxes, fiscal policy and economic history.[6][7]

Waldenström has written several scientific articles, government-commissioned reports and popular science texts. He has been advisor to the Swedish government and several of the country's government agencies regarding topics of fiscal policy, taxation and inequality.[8] He was appointed a member of the Special Council for Corona Policies by the minister for finance Magdalena Andersson (Social Democratic Party), 2020–2021.[9] Currently, he is member of the Economic Council of the minister of finance (Mikael Damberg, Social Democratic Party, 2021–2022,[10] Elisabeth Svantesson, Moderate Party, 2022-).[11]

Books[edit]

  • Bergh, Andreas; Nilsson, Therese; Waldenström, Daniel (2012). Blir vi sjuka av inkomstskillnader? : en introduktion till sambanden mellan inkomst, ojämlikhet och hälsa. Studentlitteratur AB. ISBN 978-91-44-08236-3.[12]
  • Sick of Inequality? An Introduction to the Relationship between Inequality and Health, Edward Elgar 2016.[13]
  • Historical monetary and financial statistics for Sweden, vol. 1: Exchange rates, prices and wages, 1277-2008 by Rodney Edvinsson, Tor Jacobson, Daniel Waldenstrom.[14]
  • Waldenström, Daniel (2009). Lifting All Boats?: The Evolution of Income and Wealth Inequality Over the Path of Development. Media-Tryck [distributör]. ISBN 978-91-628-7924-2.[15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Daniel Waldenström". Research Institute of Industrial Economics.
  2. ^ "Daniel Waldenström". Uppsala University, Sweden.
  3. ^ ""How Capital Should be Taxed"". Austrian Institute of Economic Research.
  4. ^ "Daniel Waldenström". IZA - Institute of Labor Economics.
  5. ^ "Nearly one in two university staff are administrative". University World News.
  6. ^ "Professorn sågar påståenden om ökade klyftor: "Politisk propaganda"". Tidningen Näringslivet (in Swedish). 24 April 2023.
  7. ^ Dagel, Magnus (11 May 2021). "Nationalekonomen: Att arbeta sig rik är förmodligen svårast i Sverige". Dagens industri (in Swedish).
  8. ^ "New paper on support for inheritance taxation". WID - World Inequality Database.
  9. ^ "SSE professor serves on Minister for Finance's economic council - hhs.se - Stockholm School of Economics". Stockholm School of Economics.
  10. ^ "Tunga ekonomer ska ge råd till finansministern". Altinget.dk. 24 March 2022.
  11. ^ "Finansministern presenterar budgeten för Nationalekonomiska föreningen". IFN.se.
  12. ^ "Stefan Fors: Blir vi sjuka av inkomstskillnader?". Ekonomistas. 22 October 2012.
  13. ^ Jones, Andrew M. (1 March 2018). "Book review of Sick of inequality? An introduction to the relationship between inequality and health". The Journal of Economic Inequality. 16 (1): 127–129. doi:10.1007/s10888-017-9357-7. ISSN 1573-8701.
  14. ^ Flandreau, Marc (2011). "Review of Historical monetary and financial statistics for Sweden, vol. 1: Exchange rates, prices and wages, 1277-2008". The Economic History Review. 64 (4): 1409–1410. ISSN 0013-0117.
  15. ^ Escosura, Leandro Prados de la (2011). "Lifting All Boats? The Evolution of Income and Wealth Inequality over the Path of Development". Scandinavian Economic History Review. 59 (1): 83. ISSN 0358-5522.

External links[edit]