The team
Bernard Hoekman
Part-time Professor
Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies
Contact info
Working languages
Dutch, English, French
Biography
Bernard M. Hoekman is the Director of the research area “Global Economics”. Prior positions include Director of the International Trade Department and Research Manager in the Development Research Group of the World Bank and economist in the GATT Secretariat. A graduate of the Erasmus University Rotterdam, he obtained his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan. His research focuses on international trade and development questions and the governance of the global trading system. He is a CEPR Research Fellow, co-Director of the CEPR Trade Policy Research Network, and a Senior Associate of the Economic Research Forum for the Arab countries, Turkey and Iran.
Recent research output
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M.; LIPPITSCH, Christian; OLARREAGA, Marcelo; SANFILIPPO, Marco; TICKU, Rohit, Value-added in African exports and rules of origin - Working Paper
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M.; TAS, Bedri Kamil Onur, Discretion and public procurement outcomes in Europe - Article
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M., Aid for trade in a changing global context - Working Paper
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M., Multilevel institutional approaches to support deeper integration in ASEAN - Working Paper
- SANTERAMO, Fabio Gaetano; JELLIFFE, Jeremy; HOEKMAN, Bernard M., Agri-food value chains and the global food dollar : the role of trade and services - Working Paper
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M.; SANFILIPPO, Marco; SANTI, Filippo; TICKU, Rohit, Trade, productivity, and services input intensity - Article
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M.; MAVROIDIS, Petros C., Plurilateral agreements, multilateralism and economic development - Working Paper
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M.; TAS, Bedri Kamil Onur, Discretion and public procurement outcomes in Europe - Working Paper
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M.; SANTI, Filippo; SHINGAL, Anirudh, Country characteristics and trade policy during the COVID-19 pandemic - Working Paper
- HOEKMAN, Bernard M., Comment on 'Can the World Trade Organization act as a bulwark against deglobalization?' - Article