- Visiting Professor, Sasin School of Management
- Associate Dean for International Relations and Diversity & Professor of Macroeconomics and International Economics, WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management
- Associate Dean for International Relations and Diversity, WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management
- Professor of Macroeconomics and International Economics, WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management
- Frenkel, M., J.-C. Rülke and L. Zimmermann, Do Private Sector Forecasters Chase after IMF or OECD Forecasts?, forthcoming in Journal of Macroeconomics.
- Frenkel, M., J.-C. Rülke and L. Zimmermann,, Do Current Account Forecasters Herd? – Evidence from the Euro Area and the G7 Countries”, Review of International Economics, Vol. 20 (2012), pp. 221–236.
- Fendel, R., M. Frenkel, and J.-C. Rülke, “Ex-ante Taylor Rules and Expectation Forming in Emerging Markets”, Journal of Comparative Economics, Vol. 39 (2011), pp. 230-244.
- Frenkel, M., E. Lis, and J.-C. Rülke, Has the Economic Crisis of 2007-2009 Changed the Expectation Formation Process in the Euro Area?”, Economic Modeling, Vol. 28 (2011), pp. 1808-1814.
- Frenkel, M. and R. Fendel, Inflation Differentials in the Euro Area: Did the ECB Care?”, Applied Economics, Vol. 41 (2009), pp. 1293-1302.
- Frenkel, M., C. Pierdzioch and G. Stadtmann, Modeling the Intensity of Foreign Exchange Intervention Activity”, Economics Letters, Vol. 85 (2004), pp. 347-351.
Professional Experience:
- Dean of WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management, Germany – 2005 – 2014
- Professor of macroeconomics and international economics, WHU – 1993 – present
- Various visiting professorships 1990 – 2013:
- Harvard University Summer School, Cambridge (Boston)
- Emory University, Atlanta
- Georgetown University, Washington D.C.
- Ross School of Business, Michigan University, Ann Arbor
- Tepper School of Business, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh
- Sasin School of Management, Bangkok, Thailand
- Assistant Professor, University of Mainz, Germany – 1988 – 1993
- Economist, International Monetary Fund; Washington, D.C., USA – 1985 – 1988
- Habilitation (German post-doctoral degree), University of Mainz, Germany; Thesis topic: “Exchange Rate Volatility: Empirical Evidence and Forward Rate Bias”
- Doctoral Degree in Economics (Summa cum laude); Dissertation topic: “Macroeconomics of Protectionism under Fixed and Flexible Exchange Rates”
- Diploma Degree in Economics (Master equivalent), University of Mainz, Germany