Dr. Langdana is the Director of the Rutgers Executive MBA Program – The Powerhouse -- and the Dean’s Professor of Business at Rutgers Business School. His areas of specialization include monetary and fiscal policy implications, international trade, and global macroeconomic policy. All his widely read blogs and articles, including his Fireside Chats, on current global fiscal and monetary policy analyses can be read by scrolling down or clicking here.
Dr. Langdana is the recipient of the Horace dePodwin Research Award and more than 30 teaching awards, including the highest possible teaching award at Rutgers University -- the Warren I. Susman Award. He has also received Rutgers Business School's Paul Nadler Award for Excellence in Teaching and was named by BusinessWeek as one of the two Most Popular Business Professors at Rutgers University (BusinessWeek, Oct. 2nd, 2000). From 2011 to 2013, the Award for Excellence in Teaching in the MBA Program was named the Farrokh Langdana Teaching Excellence Award. In 2015, soon after Rutgers Business School moved to its current location at 1 Washington Park, Prof. Langdana was honored by Dean Lei and the Faculty and Alumni of Rutgers Business School with a classroom named in his honor.
In October 2022, Prof. Langdana won the Dean's Meritorious Service Award, and then later that month, he was also awarded the prestigious designation of RBS Dean's Professor of Business.
Dr. Langdana's Fire Side Chatscan be watched on YouTube. All his blogs can be read by scrolling down this page.
Dean Lei Lei: I am very pleased to share that due to the program quality and reputation reflected in the ranking of our Rutgers Executive MBA program as # 5 in 2026 globally and tied for # 1 in North America by the prestigious CEO Magazine, Alexandra Skinner, editor of the London-based publication, conducted an interview with Farrokh Langdana recently, [see “Rutgers: More than just an EMBA Powerhouse”]. CEO Magazine has been widely circulated among CEOs and business opinion leaders around the world and can be found in Business Class lounges in major airports globally.
The strength of a large public business school like RBS depends, to a great extent, on student satisfaction and program reputation. Thank you Farrokh, your EMBA team, and many of our faculty and staff members who taught and supported the Rutgers EMBA Powerhouse, for your continued effort and excellence in putting RBS on the global map!!!
Professor Langdana is a professor in the Finance and Economics Department at Rutgers Business School and is also the director of the globally ranked and highly regarded Rutgers Executive MBA Program. Dr. Langdana was recently interviewed by The Wall Street Journal, where he discusses how the Rutgers EMBA program evolves constantly to meet the changing needs and demands of the global executive workplace. He has been the director since 1997.
He currently teaches Macroeconomic Policy as well as International Trade and Global Macropolicy in the EMBA program at Rutgers Business School. In addition to his role at Rutgers, Prof. Langdana has taught extensively in China, Singapore, and France as well as in Iceland and India. All of his courses have a genuinely global outlook.
As Executive MBA graduates rapidly move towards their “corner offices on their top floors” given the exceptional mobility provided by Rutgers EMBA, they will inevitably have to truly understand inflation and its role on long-term rates, taxes and their implications for capital expenditures, trade/tariff wars and oil shocks and their disruptive roles on global supply chains and productivity, and government regulations which could change literally every week. Farrokh Langdana’s macro course will totally prepare Rutgers EMBA graduates to tackle these issues.
Both Langdana’s courses are highly applied; students typically analyze fiscal and monetary policies from Wall Street Journal articles, which may be just a few days old! Current global fiscal and monetary policies, budget and trade deficits, global capital flows, and their effects on inflation, output, employment, interest rates, stock prices, housing bubbles, commodities, and exchange rates are analyzed. The courses are highly global in nature and extremely relevant and current. Some current topics are: What is currently driving global inflation, and how can this be fixed? What was the role of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) in keeping inflation in check? Will AI boost productivity sufficiently to keep inflation in check? What is the global Liquidity Trap and why is it important? Why do stock prices often have little to do with the real state of the economy? How will economies rebound after the supply-side shocks are behind us? These courses, along with the Managerial Economics (Pricing) course in Semester 2, have been in the top three in the world in Economics in global EMBA programs for four years in a row in the Financial Times and in the Top Ten, over ten times.
I am not a prior student nor have I met you; however I have been very interested in the current economic conditions ever since my farm business went under early 2020. I was searching for information on inflation and found your youtube lecture titled, "Upcoming Inflation, The Biden Stimulus, and will America Overheat the Planet?" viewable at URL: https://youtu.be/mXZWauv_59Y . I have a bachelors in mathematics so my econ understanding is very rudimentary. Your lecture on youtube did a fantastic job of putting the current economic context into perspective for me, so thank you!
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Michael Rivera
Thanks again for a great semester, Prof. Langdana! I’ve learned more economics (and history) in this one class than I have throughout my entire undergrad and graduate level education. Please let me know if there are any other classes I can take with you!
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Dana Salizzoni, Rutgers MBA
I can honestly say that you are one of the best professors I have had. Your insight and your careful, thoughtful explanation made a complex subject easy to understand. It is the first time I have heard a foreign professor impart fair comments on China's past, present and future.
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Frances Xu
When I applied to REMBA, I was initially rejected ......I sent you a personal letter and asked you to reconsider and I will never forget your response, "Fortune favors the bold.... see you at the week in residence.” You took a chance on me.
6 years after graduation, I was named Vice President of Operations at my company. I owe much of my success to you and the entire REMBA family. The skills I learned allowed me to be "bold". To take the plunge into that next challenge, suggest things that were outside the status quo, to refer back to my cohort and to my lessons for advice and guidance.
It all started with you. You took a chance on me and gave me the opportunity, then you and your program provided the knowledge that I needed to be successful. I am eternally grateful and hope you continue to be an educator and mentor for a long time.