Hans-Joachim Voth (D.Phil, Oxford, 1996), holds a UBS Foundation Professorship at the Economics Department, Zurich University. He is an economic historian with interests in financial history, long-term persistence and growth, as well as political risk and macroeconomic instability. Hans-Joachim Voth is a Research Fellow in the International Macroeconomics Program at CEPR (London), and a Fellow of both the Econometric Society and of the Royal Historical Society. His research has appeared in the American Economic Review, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Journal of Political Economy, Review of Economic Studies, Review of Economics and Statistics, Economic Journal, Journal of Economic Growth, European Economic Review, Explorations in Economic History, Journal of Economic History, as well as in three academic books (including, in 2014, Lending to the Borrower from Hell: Debt, Taxes, and Default in the Age of Philip II, Princeton University Press). He has served as Joint Managing Editor of the Economic Journal (2005-11), an Associate Editor at the QJE (2011-21), and as an editor of Explorations in Economic History (2003-05).

VoxEU Column
Expecting the Spanish Inquisition: Economic backwardness and religious persecution
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- Development 
- Economic history

VoxEU Column
From tragedy to hesitancy: How public health failures boosted COVID-19 vaccine scepticism
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- Health Economics 
- COVID-19

VoxEU Column
The sword and the word: How Allied bombing and propaganda undermined German morale during WWII
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- Economic history 
- Politics and economics

VoxEU Column
Trade and travel in the time of epidemics
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- COVID-19 
- Economic history 
- International trade

VoxEU Column
New Deal, new patriots: How Roosevelt’s welfare programmes made America great again
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- Economic history 
- Politics and economics 
- Welfare state and social Europe