Peter Blair Henry, an economist, was the ninth Dean of New York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business, and William R. Berkley Professor of Economics and Business, and author of . Previously, he was the Konosuke Matsushita Professor of International Economics at Stanford University.
Peter Blair Henry is Dean Emeritus of New York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business. The youngest person to hold the position, he assumed the Deanship in January 2010 and joined the NYU Stern Faculty as the William R. Berkley Professor of Economics and Finance. Henry joined NYU Stern from Stanford University, where he was the Konosuke Matsushita Professor of International Economics, the John and Cynthia Fry Gunn Faculty Scholar, and Associate Director of the Center for Global Business and the Economy at the Stanford University Graduate School of Business. Henry's research and teaching have received support from the National Science Foundation's Early CAREER Development Program. From 2000 to 2001, Henry was a National Fellow at the Hoover Institution. Henry also serves as a member of the board of directors at the National Bureau of Economic Research, the nation's leading nonprofit, non-partisan economic research organization; as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations; as a Nonresident Senior Fellow of the Brookings Institution; as a member of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's Economic Advisory Panel; and as a member of the board of directors for Citigroup as well as General Electric and Nike, Inc. In 2015, Henry was awarded the , the highest honor bestowed by the organization. In 2018, the Council for Economic Education honored Henry with its Visionary Award.
Henry's first book, , directly addresses issues of economic efficiency as well as matters of international relations. In it, Henry argues that the secret to emerging countries' success is discipline—a sustained commitment to a pragmatic growth strategy. In many ways, TURNAROUND is an extension of Henry's very first lesson in international economics, which he received at the age of eight as his family moved from the Caribbean island of Jamaica to affluent Wilmette, Illinois. The elusive answer to the question of why the average standard of living can be so different from one country to another still drives him today. The author of numerous articles and book chapters, Henry is best known for a series of publications in the three flagship journals of the American Economic Association that overturn conventional wisdom on the topics of debt relief, international capital flows, and the role of institutions in economic growth: "Debt Relief" Journal of Economic Perspectives ; "Capital Account Liberalization: Theory, Evidence, and Speculation" Journal of Economic Literature ; "Institutions vs. Policies: A Tale of Two Islands" American Economic Review. Henry's writing also appears in Global Crises, Global Solutions, the published proceedings of the Copenhagen Consensus, an international conference on how to make the most efficient use of the world's scarcest resources. The Economist magazine named the conference publication one of the Best Business Books of 2004. Henry is regularly cited in the media including on CNBC, Financial Times, Foreign Policy, and others.