Prior to joining the Olin Business School, MacDonald was professor of economics and management at the W. E. Simon School of Business, University of Rochester, and professor of economics at the University of Western Ontario. He has worked with many companies, including Bausch & Lomb, Carrier, Chase Manhattan Bank, Corning, Eastman Kodak, Harris Corporation, General Motors, IBM, Litton Industries, Rochester Gas and Electric, Frontier Communications, Xerox and Xerox’s PARC.
Glenn MacDonald
John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and Strategy
Contact Information
- Phone: 314-935-7768
- Email: macdonald@olin.wustl.edu
- Website: Website
Media Contact
In the media
Why layoffs are picking up at small businesses
Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and Strategy
As in-person life resumes, self-care businesses see surge in customers
Glenn MacDonald, John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and Strategy
Pandemic spurs a surprising uptick in entrepreneurship
Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Professor of Business, Law & Economics
The government’s Kodak moment looks badly underexposed
Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Professor of Business, Law & Economics
Wash U Students Help Businesses Strategize To Navigate The Pandemic
Glenn MacDonald, John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and Strategy
Missouri unemployment claims surge as pandemic continues
Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Professor of Business, Law & Economics
Carry-out only: Restaurants in St. Louis area ending eat-in service by midnight Thursday
Steven Fazzari, the Bert A. and Jeanette L. Lynch Distinguished Professor of Economics and Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Professor of Business, Law & Economics
Protesters claim more than $10 million impact; economist says overall that’s “minuscule”
Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Professor of Business, Law & Economics
Let’s praise Amazon, not bury it with complaints about its size
Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Professor of Business, Law & Economics
Paid leave perk for new parents growing at more St. Louis area companies
Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Professor of Business, Law & Economics
Stories
Despite challenges, starting a small business during pandemic has advantages
The pandemic spurred an entrepreneurship boom, but do these small businesses have what it takes to survive? Olin Business School’s Glenn MacDonald explains factors to consider in starting and succeeding with a new business.
2020 election and the economy
Three experts from the Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis weigh in on President Trump’s record, the state of the economy and what to expect from a second Trump term or a Biden administration.
Handing out checks gives ‘no overall economic benefit’
The U.S. Senate, with significant prodding from the Trump administration, is working on a plan to directly provide cash assistance to millions of Americans amid the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic. Experts in economics and finance from Washington University in St. Louis’ Olin Business School weigh in on how it could help housing and households and maybe pay some bills — but still not answer the problems at hand.
Olin faculty evaluate coronavirus on U.S. businesses, economy
Olin Business School faculty at Washington University in St. Louis offer perspectives on the economic, financial and everyday business reactions to the novel coronavirus outbreak.
Recessions, like earthquakes, are impossible to predict confidently
Some economic observers continue to warn about signs of a potential U.S. recession. Glenn MacDonald, the John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and Strategy at Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis, says many signs aren’t particularly reliable — but keep an eye on housing starts.
WashU Experts on the Climate Assessment
Washington University in St. Louis experts from all corners of academia long have been studying climate change in the context of their own fields. Here is a sampling of their perspectives on the National Climate Assessment released Nov. 23.
American Airlines layoffs could spell end of the airline
American Airlines’ plan to lay off more than
13,000 employees and eliminate all four of its pension plans as part of
its bankruptcy reorganization could eventually spell the end of the
airline and leave its pilots with dramatically reduced pensions, say two
experts at Washington University in St. Louis.
SOPA would be sour note for music industry
The controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA)
is merely an attempt to shore up a dying and inefficient business model,
grafted onto an attempt to control the Internet, says an expert on the
business of entertainment at Washington University in St. Louis.
Free content challenges movie biz
Should movies and television shows be free on the Internet? Which business models will benefit artists, producers and distributors? Questions such as these are being pondered in a popular course at Olin Business School, “The Economics of Entertainment.” Industry executives visit the class to provide corporate insights about the challenges facing film and music makers in the Internet age.
Business innovation is not dependent on creative people
American companies continue to grapple with staying competitive in the global economy. Increasingly, companies and business gurus are citing innovation as the key to sustaining American business’ strength. What’s not clear is what it means for a company to be innovative. Washington University business professors say the best way to infuse innovation into a company is not by hiring creative people, but by managing innovation in a systematic way. More…
It’s the wave of the future: The economy thrives, but the employment rate doesn’t
Recovering from a recession doesn’t include the entire economy.The “jobless recovery” that befuddled observers after the recession in the early 2000s was no fluke. It’s actually a pattern that we can expect to continue thanks to technology’s uneven impact across sectors of the economy. What’s more, this new trend in business cycles is as important in making policy decisions as it is in ensuring the stability of the country’s economy. More…
Quantitative approach to strategy shakes up “business as usual”
Businesses today are turning to quantifiable analysis to map strategies. According to a professor at the Olin School of Business, companies can address specific problems in a scientific way by using basic principals of game theory.
Fewer capital flow restrictions foster stronger economic growth
MacDonaldShaken by numerous accounting-related scandals in recent years, some investors are clamoring for better legal protection for their investments. But does investor protection through government regulation foster economic growth? To assess the widely-held view that it does, WUSTL economics professor Glenn MacDonald and two colleagues have completed a study concluding that the positive effect of investor protection on economic growth is stronger for countries with fewer restrictions on international capital flows.
Advances in technology impact value of workers’ skills
MacDonaldIt is no secret that advances in technology can greatly impact the value of workers’ skills. Older workers often find the updating of complex technology uneconomic, while younger workers acquire and readily employ skills tailored to the newest technology. The result: the latter group’s productivity rises, diminishing the value of output produced by their older counterparts. A recently published study by Glenn MacDonald, Washington University’s John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and Strategy, is the first to model and explain the nature and severity of this effect.