Andrew Glover is a research and policy advisor in the economic research department at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. His research studies labor and credit markets from a macroeconomic perspective. Prior to joining the Federal Reserve of Kansas City, Mr. Glover was an assistant professor of economics at the University of Texas at Austin. He earned his PhD from the University of Minnesota in 2011.

Professional Journals and Books

  • "Health versus Wealth: On the Distributional Effects of Controlling a Pandemic" with Jonathan Heathcote, Dirk Krueger, and Victor Ríos-Rull, Journal of Monetary Economics. Forthcoming.
  • "Optimal Age-Based Vaccination and Economic Mitigation Policies for the Second Phase of the Covid-19 Pandemic" with Jonathan Heathcote and Dirk Krueger. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control. 140
  • "Unintended Consequences of Employer Credit Check Bans for Labor Markets" with Kristle Cortes and Murat Tasci. Review of Economics and Statistics. 104 (5), 997-1009.
  • "Intergenerational Redistribution in the Great Recession" with Jonathan Heathcote, Dirk Krueger, and José-Víctor Ríos-Rull. Journal of Political Economy, 128 (10), 3730-3778.
  • "Can Capital Deepening Explain the Global Decline in Labor's Share?" with Jacob Short, Review of Economic Dynamics. 35, 35-53.
  • "Aggregate Effects of Minimum Wage Regulation at the Zero Lower Bound", Journal of Monetary Economics, 07, 114-128.
  • "Facts on the Distributions of Earnings, Income, and Wealth in the United States: 2007 Update", with Javier Díaz-Giménez and José-Víctor Ríos-Rull, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review, February 2011, Vol. 34 No. 1.

Economic Review

Research Working Papers

Work in Progress

  • "Using Minimum Wages to Avoid Liquidity Traps: Stability vs. Allocative Efficiency"
  • "Employer Credit Checks: Poverty Traps vs. Matching Efficiency" with Dean Corbae
  • "Demographic Origins of the Decline in Labor’s Share" with Jacob Short

Economic Bulletin