Wolfgang Keller's research interests include the diffusion of technology between firms and countries, international trade and economic development. Recent work has examined the impact of institutional and technological change for trade; Wal-Mart's role in the productivity transformation of Mexico's manufacturing sector; the industry productivity changes resulting from import liberalization; and why the first industrial revolution took place in England and not in China.He was awarded multiple grants by the United States National Science Foundation and was Resident Scholar at the International Monetary Fund's Research Department in 2003. He is currently Director of the McGuire Center for International Economics and Professor at the University of Colorado-Boulder, a Research Fellow of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a Research Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research. Recent experience includes work for The World Bank, Industry Canada, and the European Central Bank.Prior to joining the University of Colorado, he taught at Brown University, the University of Texas-Austin, the University of Toronto, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Publications in academic journals include: American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of Econometrics, Journal of Economic Growth, Journal of Development Economics, and European Economic Review.

VoxEU Column
Place prosperity versus people prosperity: Migration and the intergenerational transmission of knowledge
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- Development & Growth 
- Economic history

VoxEU Column
Modernisation and China’s ‘century of humiliation’
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- Development 
- Economic history 
- International trade

VoxEU Column
‘Biological clocks’, import competition, and the gender gap in earnings
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- Gender 
- International trade 
- Labour Markets

VoxEU Column
Joint ventures and technology transfer: New evidence from China
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- Industrial organisation 
- Productivity and Innovation

VoxEU Column
Globalisation and executive compensation
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- International trade 
- Poverty and Income Inequality