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Congratulations to the Economics 'Q Award' Winners from the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning!

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Ann LeBrun, Jonas Poulson, and Mikkel Plagborg-Moller have all been named as winners of the Fall 2016 'Q Awards' for Lecturers and Preceptors from the Bok Center. Also named were several Teaching Fellows and Teaching Assistants in Economics!

From the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning:

In conjunction with the Office of Undergraduate Education, the Bok Center hosts receptions twice a year to distribute Certificate of Distinction in Teaching Awards (known as "The Q Awards") for the Fall and Spring semesters, respectively.  The award is based on an overall score of 4.5 or higher with a minimum of 5 evaluations on the Committee on Undergraduate Education (CUE) section evaluations.

Recipients of the Certificate of Teaching Excellence and The Certificate of Distinction in Teaching for the Fall 2016 semester have been announced, and recipients will be honored at a reception in April. Congratulations to these wonderful teachers!  

Those Teaching Fellows and Teaching Assistants named as recipients of Certificates of Distinction in Economics for Fall 2016 are as follows.

ECON 1010A Dennis T Bao
ECON 1010A Benjamin Brewster Griswold
ECON 1010A Hunter Jackson Stanley
ECON 1057 Andrew Ferdowsian
ECON 10A Daniel Joseph Egan
ECON 10A Tian Feng
ECON 10A Stacey A Gelsheimer
ECON 10A Jetson Leder-Luis
ECON 10A Carol Rodrigues
ECON 10A Benjamin Sacks P. 
ECON 10A John Connolly Scianimanico
ECON 10A William Ramzi Tadros
ECON 10A Rachel Deyette Werkema
ECON 10A Steven James White
ECON 1123 Peter Haining Tu
ECON 1400 Holly Marguerite Dykstra
ECON 1420 Ashley Cooper Craig
ECON 1545 Nihar Divyesh Shah
ECON 2010C Argyrios Tsiaras
ECON 2020A Caitlin Elizabeth Carroll
ECON 2140 Jann Lorenz Spiess
ECON 2395 Bryan Nicholas Patenaude
ECON 970 Grieve Chelwa
ECON 970 Dorian B. Klein
ECON 970 Daniel John Lewis
ECON 980DD Chenzi Xu
ECON 980X Lisa Ann Abraham
ECON 985TA Jonathan Libgober

Many congratulations to all!

 

Congratulations to the Economics 'Q Award' Winners from the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning!

Economics Assistant Professors Matteo Maggiori and Stefanie Stantcheva have each received a CAREER award from the National Science Foundation.

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In the words of the NSF:  "CAREER: The Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program is a Foundation-wide activity that offers the National Science Foundation's most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization." Hearty congratulations to Stefanie and Matteo!

Stantcheva_Maggiori

Harvard Econometrics Team Wins "The Econometric Game" at University of Amsterdam

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... for the second year in a row!...

Every year, the University of Amsterdam hosts the Econometric Game.

The 30 participating universities send delegations of four students majoring in econometrics (or relevant studies) with a maximum of two PhD students.

The Harvard Economics team was comprised of Kirsten Clinton, Sanjay Misra, Gregor Schubert, and Chenzi Xu.

Each of the 30 teams is given a (surprise) case study, which they have to resolve in two days.

This year the case was to assess the spatial spillovers of adopting crime prevention technologies in the Netherlands.

After two days of work, the ten teams with the best solutions continued to day three. On the third day the finalists conducted additional analyses that imputed the overall efficacy of the crime prevention policies.  The solutions were reviewed by a jury of professors who picked the winning team.

Congratulations Kirsten, Sanjay, Gregor, and Chenzi on a second consecutive win for Harvard!

Last year's winning team in 2016 included Daniel Lewis, Kirsten Clinton, Stephanie Cheng, and Sanjay Misra.

Econometric Games 2017

Congratulations to Professor Marc Melitz on His Election to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences!

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Professor Melitz was one of 228 national and international scholars, artists, philanthropists, and business leaders to join the 237th class of members.

From the Press Release:

CAMBRIDGE, MA | APRIL 12, 2017 — The American Academy of Arts and Sciences today announced the election of 228 new members. They include some of the world’s most accomplished scholars, scientists, writers, artists, as well as civic, business, and philanthropic leaders. 

The list of the 237th class of new members is available at www.amacad.org/members. 

Founded in 1780, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences is one of the country’s oldest learned societies and independent policy research centers, convening leaders from the academic, business, and government sectors to respond to the challenges facing—and opportunities available to—the nation and the world. Members contribute to Academy publications and studies in science, engineering, and technology policy; global security and international affairs; the humanities, arts, and education; and American institutions and the public good. 

Members of the 2017 class include winners of the Pulitzer Prize and the Wolf Prize; MacArthur Fellows; Fields Medalists; Presidential Medal of Freedom and National Medal of Arts recipients; and Academy Award, Grammy Award, Emmy Award, and Tony Award winners. 

“It is an honor to welcome this new class of exceptional women and men as part of our distinguished membership,” said Don Randel, Chair of the Academy’s Board of Directors. “Their talents and expertise will enrich the life of the Academy and strengthen our capacity to spread knowledge and understanding in service to the nation.” 

“In a tradition reaching back to the earliest days of our nation, the honor of election to the American Academy is also a call to service,” said Academy President Jonathan F. Fanton. “Through our projects, publications, and events, the Academy provides members with opportunities to make common cause and produce the useful knowledge for which the Academy’s 1780 charter calls.” 

Scientific leaders in the new class include: Fields Medalist Maryam Mirzakhani, who has done path-breaking work on the geometry of Teichmüller spaces and hyperbolic Riemann surfaces; astrophysicist Gabriela Gonzalez, an expert in the field of gravitation wave physics; engineer Ann Lee, who works on the development of anti-cancer therapeutics; computer scientist Daniela Rus, who built some of the first Web crawling agents that were able to search for structured data inside documents; mathematician and Fields Medalist Manjul Bhargava, a leader in number theory; structural biologist Jamie Cate, who transformed the understanding of protein synthesis; neurologist Helen Mayberg, who utilizes a multidisciplinary neural systems approach to study depression and recovery; immunologist James Allison, whose research is being used to develop new strategies for the treatment of autoimmune diseases and for immunotherapy of cancer; and evolutionary plant biologist Pamela Soltis

Social scientists in the new class include: psychologist Michael Tomasello, a widely cited scholar of comparative studies of humans and great apes; economist Marc Melitz, who developed a new approach to the analysis of international trade; political scientist Janet Box-Steffensmeier, a scholar of American politics and methodology; attorney William Lee, a leading thinker and lawyer in the field of intellectual property; and cultural anthropologist Caroline Brettell, whose research focuses on international migration, specifically the issues of gender and personal narrative in the study of the migrant experience....

Marc Melitz is the David A. Wells Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University. He holds a B.A. from Haverford College (1989), an M.S.B.A. from the Robert Smith School of Business (1992), and a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan (2000).  He is a fellow of the Econometric Society and is affiliated with the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), CESifo, and the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.  His broad research interests are in international trade and investment.  More specifically, he studies producer-level responses to globalization and their implications for aggregate trade and investment patterns.  His research has been funded by the Sloan Foundation and by the NSF.

Marc Melitz

Professors Gita Gopinath and James Stock Deliver Keynote Lectures at 2017 Royal Economic Society Annual Conference

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The RES Annual conference was held at the University of Bristol on April 10-12, 2017.

Professor Gopinath delivered the Hahn Lecture on "Dominant Currency Paradigm" on April 10, and Professor Stock delivered the Sargan Lecture on "Identification of Dynamic Causal Effects" on April 11. 

Keynote Lectures

Gita Gopinath

Gita Gopinath is the John Zwaanstra Professor of International Studies and of Economics at Harvard University. Her research focuses on International Finance and Macroeconomics. She is a visiting scholar at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, member of the economic advisory panel of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Economic Adviser to the Chief Minister of Kerala state (India), a Managing Editor of the Review of Economic Studies, co-editor of the current Handbook of International Economics, and a research associate with the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) for the programs in Economic Fluctuations and Growth, International Finance and Macroeconomics, and Monetary Economics. She also served as a member of the Eminent Persons Advisory Group on G-20 Matters for India's Ministry of Finance. In 2011, she was chosen as a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum. Before coming to Harvard, she was an assistant professor of economics at the University of Chicago's Graduate School of Business.

James Stock

James H. Stock is the Harold Hitchings Burbank Professor of Political Economy, Faculty of Arts and Sciences and member of the faculty at the Harvard Kennedy School. He received a M.S. in statistics and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley. His research areas are empirical macroeconomics, monetary policy, econometric methods, and energy and environmental policy. He is Co-Editor of the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity and is a coauthor with Mark Watson of a leading introductory econometrics textbook and is a member of various professional boards. He previously served as Managing Editor of the Review of Economics and Statistics from 1992-2003, as Chair of the Harvard Economics Department from 2007-2009, as Co-Editor of Econometrica from 2009-2012, and as Member of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers from 2013-2014.

Congratulations to Professor Amartya Sen on His Award of the the 2017 Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science!

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The Johan Skytte Prize, awarded by Uppsala University in Sweden, is often considered an equivalent in Political Science of the Nobel Prizes.

Professor Sen will attend the traditional Prize Award Ceremony in Uppsala on September 30, 2017.

From the Uppsala University press release on the award:

Professor Sen receives the prize for his many-sided scholarship “combining insights on the vulnerabilities of humankind with knowledge on the unique capacities of democratic political power to mitigate and diminish this exposure”....

In 1622, Johan Skytte, then Vice-Chancellor of the University, established the Johan Skytte chair in Eloquence and Government, which is probably the world’s oldest active professorship in political science. The lands included in the original donation continue to finance research and the Johan Skytte Prize. The prize sum of SEK 500,000 is awarded each year by The Skytte Foundation at Uppsala University to the person who has made the “most valuable contribution to political science”.

Amartya Sen is Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, and Professor of Economics and Philosophy, at Harvard University and was until 2004 the Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.  He is also Senior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows.  Earlier on he was Professor of Economics at Jadavpur University Calcutta, the Delhi School of Economics, and the London School of Economics, and Drummond Professor of Political Economy at Oxford University. He is the winner in 1998 of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.

 

 

 

Amartya Sen

Royal Statistical Society Awards Professor Neil Shephard the 2017 Guy Medal in Silver

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The Guy Medal is given to Prof. Shephard for a seminal paper written with his co-author Ole Eiler Barndorff-Nielson.

The Royal Statistical Society announcement is:

“The 2017 Guy Medal in Silver is awarded to Neil Shephard for his seminal paper "Non-Gaussian Ornstein-Uhlenbeck-based models and some of their uses in financial economics" written jointly with Ole Eiler Barndorff-Nielsen, and read to the Society in 2001, exemplifying his highly influential contributions across Statistics, Econometrics and Finance, including particle filtering, stochastic volatility models and the statistical analysis of high-frequency data.”

Neil Shephard is Professor of Economics and Statistics, in the Economics and Statistics Departments at Harvard University. He has worked at Harvard since 2013. He is currently also the Chair of the Statistics Department at Harvard.

 

Royal Statistical Society Awards Professor Neil Shephard the 2017 Guy Medal in Silver

Congratulations to Professor Ariel Pakes on Winning the Jean-Jacques Laffont Prize!

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The annual prize is awarded by IDEI at the University of Toulouse.

The highly prestigious Jean-Jacques Laffont annual prize was created by the IDEI (Institute D’Economie Industrielle - Institute for Industrial Organization), in partnership with the city of Toulouse. The IDEI was founded by Jean-Jacques Laffont in 1990. Jean Tirole is the Scientific Director of the Institute.

Ariel Pakes is the Thomas Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at Harvard University, where he teaches courses in Industrial Organization and in Econometrics.  Before coming to Harvard in 1999, he was the Charles and Dorothea Dilley Professor of Economics at Yale University (1997-99). He has held other tenured positions at Yale (1988-97), the University of Wisconsin (1986-88), and the University of Jerusalem (1985-86).  Pakes received his doctorate degree from Harvard University in 1980, and he stayed at Harvard as a Lecturer until he took up a position in Jerusalem in 1981.  Pakes received the award for the best graduate student advisor at Yale in 1996 and his past students are now faculty at several leading economic departments.

 

 

Ariel Pakes

Economics Department Director of Administration Belynda Bady Wins 2017 FAS Dean's Distinction Award

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Congratulations go to Belynda Bady for her outstanding service as Director of Administration and for brilliantly leading the Social Science Division’s Culture and Community Initiative!

This initiative is focused on improving our communal morale and engagement! Belynda has led this initiative from its inception, to the formation of several subcommittees, to the creation of a final report of insightful recommendations, all within a compressed ten-month time frame. Along the way Belynda has inspired administrative leaders to think proactively, creatively and constructively on how to create a better working environment for everyone at Harvard.

The Dean's Distinction Award is given to eligible FAS and SEAS staff members who are nominated by faculty and staff members based on their exceptional service and who act with the highest integrity and serve as role models among FAS and SEAS staff. They make an exceptional contribution and demonstrate outstanding citizenship and collaboration on behalf of the FAS and/or SEAS.

Belynda joined the Harvard Economics Department as Director of Administration in March 2010.

Previous recipients of the Dean's Distinction Award in the Economics Department include Graduate Program Administrator Brenda Piquet in 2015, former staff member Linda Wang, Manager of Research Administration in 2014, and Faculty Assistant Ann Richards in 2010.

 

 

 

Economics Department Director of Administration Belynda Bady Wins 2017 FAS Dean's Distinction Award

Congratulations to Professor Amanda Pallais on Winning a 2017 Sloan Research Fellowship!

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Professor Pallais is one of 126 early-career scholars chosen to receive a fellowship by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

From the website of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation: "The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation congratulates the winners of the 2017 Sloan Research Fellowships. These 126 early-career scholars represent the most promising scientific researchers working today. Their achievements and potential place them among the next generation of scientific leaders in the U.S. and Canada. Since 1955, Sloan Research Fellows have gone on to win 43 Nobel Prizes, 16 Fields Medals, 69 National Medals of Science, 16 John Bates Clark Medals, and numerous other distinguished awards."

Amanda Pallais is the Paul Sack Associate Professor of Political Economy and Social Studies at Harvard University. Her research focuses on the barriers preventing workers from achieving efficient employment outcomes and students from optimally investing in human capital. Her research has explored the extent to which the cost of developing a reputation acts as a barrier preventing workers from entering the labor market, how small changes in college application fees can dramatically affect the college application choices of low-SES students, and how motivating high school students with merit scholarships for college can substantially improve their high school performance. Currently, she is working on a field experiment in France analyzing the possible effects of discrimination on the job performance of women and minorities and a field experiment in Nebraska evaluating whether college scholarships can increase college matriculation and improve the job prospects of low-income students. Pallais received her B.A. in Economics and Mathematics from the University of Virginia in 2006 and her Ph.D. in Economics from MIT in 2011.

Congratulations to Professor Amanda Pallais on Winning a 2017 Sloan Research Fellowship!

Congratulations to the Economics 'Q Award' Winners from the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning!

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Ann LeBrun, Jonas Poulson, and Mikkel Plagborg-Moller have all been named as winners of the Fall 2016 'Q Awards' for Lecturers and Preceptors from the Bok Center. Also named were several Teaching Fellows and Teaching Assistants in Economics!

From the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning:

In conjunction with the Office of Undergraduate Education, the Bok Center hosts receptions twice a year to distribute Certificate of Distinction in Teaching Awards (known as "The Q Awards") for the Fall and Spring semesters, respectively.  The award is based on an overall score of 4.5 or higher with a minimum of 5 evaluations on the Committee on Undergraduate Education (CUE) section evaluations.

Recipients of the Certificate of Teaching Excellence and The Certificate of Distinction in Teaching for the Fall 2016 semester have been announced, and recipients will be honored at a reception in April. Congratulations to these wonderful teachers!  

Those Teaching Fellows and Teaching Assistants named as recipients of Certificates of Distinction in Economics for Fall 2016 are as follows.

ECON 1010A Dennis T Bao
ECON 1010A Benjamin Brewster Griswold
ECON 1010A Hunter Jackson Stanley
ECON 1057 Andrew Ferdowsian
ECON 10A Daniel Joseph Egan
ECON 10A Tian Feng
ECON 10A Stacey A Gelsheimer
ECON 10A Jetson Leder-Luis
ECON 10A Carol Rodrigues
ECON 10A Benjamin Sacks P. 
ECON 10A John Connolly Scianimanico
ECON 10A William Ramzi Tadros
ECON 10A Rachel Deyette Werkema
ECON 10A Steven James White
ECON 1123 Peter Haining Tu
ECON 1400 Holly Marguerite Dykstra
ECON 1420 Ashley Cooper Craig
ECON 1545 Nihar Divyesh Shah
ECON 2010C Argyrios Tsiaras
ECON 2020A Caitlin Elizabeth Carroll
ECON 2140 Jann Lorenz Spiess
ECON 2395 Bryan Nicholas Patenaude
ECON 970 Grieve Chelwa
ECON 970 Dorian B. Klein
ECON 970 Daniel John Lewis
ECON 980DD Chenzi Xu
ECON 980X Lisa Ann Abraham
ECON 985TA Jonathan Libgober

Many congratulations to all!

 

Congratulations to the Economics 'Q Award' Winners from the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning!

Economics Assistant Professors Matteo Maggiori and Stefanie Stantcheva have each received a CAREER award from the National Science Foundation.

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In the words of the NSF:  "CAREER: The Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program is a Foundation-wide activity that offers the National Science Foundation's most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization." Hearty congratulations to Stefanie and Matteo!

Stantcheva_Maggiori

Harvard Econometrics Team Wins "The Econometric Game" at University of Amsterdam

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... for the second year in a row!...

Every year, the University of Amsterdam hosts the Econometric Game.

The 30 participating universities send delegations of four students majoring in econometrics (or relevant studies) with a maximum of two PhD students.

The Harvard Economics team was comprised of Kirsten Clinton, Sanjay Misra, Gregor Schubert, and Chenzi Xu.

Each of the 30 teams is given a (surprise) case study, which they have to resolve in two days.

This year the case was to assess the spatial spillovers of adopting crime prevention technologies in the Netherlands.

After two days of work, the ten teams with the best solutions continued to day three. On the third day the finalists conducted additional analyses that imputed the overall efficacy of the crime prevention policies.  The solutions were reviewed by a jury of professors who picked the winning team.

Congratulations Kirsten, Sanjay, Gregor, and Chenzi on a second consecutive win for Harvard!

Last year's winning team in 2016 included Daniel Lewis, Kirsten Clinton, Stephanie Cheng, and Sanjay Misra.

Econometric Games 2017

Congratulations to Professor Marc Melitz on His Election to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences!

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Professor Melitz was one of 228 national and international scholars, artists, philanthropists, and business leaders to join the 237th class of members.

From the Press Release:

CAMBRIDGE, MA | APRIL 12, 2017 — The American Academy of Arts and Sciences today announced the election of 228 new members. They include some of the world’s most accomplished scholars, scientists, writers, artists, as well as civic, business, and philanthropic leaders. 

The list of the 237th class of new members is available at www.amacad.org/members. 

Founded in 1780, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences is one of the country’s oldest learned societies and independent policy research centers, convening leaders from the academic, business, and government sectors to respond to the challenges facing—and opportunities available to—the nation and the world. Members contribute to Academy publications and studies in science, engineering, and technology policy; global security and international affairs; the humanities, arts, and education; and American institutions and the public good. 

Members of the 2017 class include winners of the Pulitzer Prize and the Wolf Prize; MacArthur Fellows; Fields Medalists; Presidential Medal of Freedom and National Medal of Arts recipients; and Academy Award, Grammy Award, Emmy Award, and Tony Award winners. 

“It is an honor to welcome this new class of exceptional women and men as part of our distinguished membership,” said Don Randel, Chair of the Academy’s Board of Directors. “Their talents and expertise will enrich the life of the Academy and strengthen our capacity to spread knowledge and understanding in service to the nation.” 

“In a tradition reaching back to the earliest days of our nation, the honor of election to the American Academy is also a call to service,” said Academy President Jonathan F. Fanton. “Through our projects, publications, and events, the Academy provides members with opportunities to make common cause and produce the useful knowledge for which the Academy’s 1780 charter calls.” 

Scientific leaders in the new class include: Fields Medalist Maryam Mirzakhani, who has done path-breaking work on the geometry of Teichmüller spaces and hyperbolic Riemann surfaces; astrophysicist Gabriela Gonzalez, an expert in the field of gravitation wave physics; engineer Ann Lee, who works on the development of anti-cancer therapeutics; computer scientist Daniela Rus, who built some of the first Web crawling agents that were able to search for structured data inside documents; mathematician and Fields Medalist Manjul Bhargava, a leader in number theory; structural biologist Jamie Cate, who transformed the understanding of protein synthesis; neurologist Helen Mayberg, who utilizes a multidisciplinary neural systems approach to study depression and recovery; immunologist James Allison, whose research is being used to develop new strategies for the treatment of autoimmune diseases and for immunotherapy of cancer; and evolutionary plant biologist Pamela Soltis

Social scientists in the new class include: psychologist Michael Tomasello, a widely cited scholar of comparative studies of humans and great apes; economist Marc Melitz, who developed a new approach to the analysis of international trade; political scientist Janet Box-Steffensmeier, a scholar of American politics and methodology; attorney William Lee, a leading thinker and lawyer in the field of intellectual property; and cultural anthropologist Caroline Brettell, whose research focuses on international migration, specifically the issues of gender and personal narrative in the study of the migrant experience....

Marc Melitz is the David A. Wells Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University. He holds a B.A. from Haverford College (1989), an M.S.B.A. from the Robert Smith School of Business (1992), and a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan (2000).  He is a fellow of the Econometric Society and is affiliated with the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), CESifo, and the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.  His broad research interests are in international trade and investment.  More specifically, he studies producer-level responses to globalization and their implications for aggregate trade and investment patterns.  His research has been funded by the Sloan Foundation and by the NSF.

Marc Melitz

Professors Gita Gopinath and James Stock Deliver Keynote Lectures at 2017 Royal Economic Society Annual Conference

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The RES Annual conference was held at the University of Bristol on April 10-12, 2017.

Professor Gopinath delivered the Hahn Lecture on "Dominant Currency Paradigm" on April 10, and Professor Stock delivered the Sargan Lecture on "Identification of Dynamic Causal Effects" on April 11. 

Keynote Lectures

Gita Gopinath

Gita Gopinath is the John Zwaanstra Professor of International Studies and of Economics at Harvard University. Her research focuses on International Finance and Macroeconomics. She is a visiting scholar at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, member of the economic advisory panel of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Economic Adviser to the Chief Minister of Kerala state (India), a Managing Editor of the Review of Economic Studies, co-editor of the current Handbook of International Economics, and a research associate with the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) for the programs in Economic Fluctuations and Growth, International Finance and Macroeconomics, and Monetary Economics. She also served as a member of the Eminent Persons Advisory Group on G-20 Matters for India's Ministry of Finance. In 2011, she was chosen as a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum. Before coming to Harvard, she was an assistant professor of economics at the University of Chicago's Graduate School of Business.

James Stock

James H. Stock is the Harold Hitchings Burbank Professor of Political Economy, Faculty of Arts and Sciences and member of the faculty at the Harvard Kennedy School. He received a M.S. in statistics and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley. His research areas are empirical macroeconomics, monetary policy, econometric methods, and energy and environmental policy. He is Co-Editor of the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity and is a coauthor with Mark Watson of a leading introductory econometrics textbook and is a member of various professional boards. He previously served as Managing Editor of the Review of Economics and Statistics from 1992-2003, as Chair of the Harvard Economics Department from 2007-2009, as Co-Editor of Econometrica from 2009-2012, and as Member of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers from 2013-2014.


Congratulations to Professor Amartya Sen on His Award of the the 2017 Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science!

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The Johan Skytte Prize, awarded by Uppsala University in Sweden, is often considered an equivalent in Political Science of the Nobel Prizes.

Professor Sen will attend the traditional Prize Award Ceremony in Uppsala on September 30, 2017.

From the Uppsala University press release on the award:

Professor Sen receives the prize for his many-sided scholarship “combining insights on the vulnerabilities of humankind with knowledge on the unique capacities of democratic political power to mitigate and diminish this exposure”....

In 1622, Johan Skytte, then Vice-Chancellor of the University, established the Johan Skytte chair in Eloquence and Government, which is probably the world’s oldest active professorship in political science. The lands included in the original donation continue to finance research and the Johan Skytte Prize. The prize sum of SEK 500,000 is awarded each year by The Skytte Foundation at Uppsala University to the person who has made the “most valuable contribution to political science”.

Amartya Sen is Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, and Professor of Economics and Philosophy, at Harvard University and was until 2004 the Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.  He is also Senior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows.  Earlier on he was Professor of Economics at Jadavpur University Calcutta, the Delhi School of Economics, and the London School of Economics, and Drummond Professor of Political Economy at Oxford University. He is the winner in 1998 of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.

 

 

 

Amartya Sen

Professor Melissa Dell Chosen as 2017 Andrew Carnegie Fellow

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She is one of 35 recipients of the 2017 Andrew Carnegie fellowships, with awards funding research and writing in the social sciences and humanities.

Melissa Dell is a former Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows and a Global Scholar in the Institutions, Organizations and Growth program at the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and a faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Melissa's research focuses on the interplay between the state, non-state actors, and economic development. In particular, she has examined the relationship between government crackdowns and drug violence in Mexico, as well as the persistence of poverty in Mexico and Peru. She holds a Ph.D. in economics from MIT,  a Bachelor's degree summa cum laude from Harvard University and an M. Phil. with Distinction from the University of Oxford, where she was a Rhodes Scholar.

 

 

Melissa Dell

Professor Ariel Pakes Elected to National Academy of Sciences

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He is one of eight Harvard University faculty to be elected this year 2017.

Ariel Pakes

Congratulations to the Graduating Seniors and Prize Winners in Economics!

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The Department of Economics is proud to celebrate our award-winning graduating seniors. Each year the Economics Department awards prizes to graduating economics thesis writers.

The Seymour E. and Ruth B. Harris Prize for Honors Thesis in Economics and the Allyn A. Young Prize are awarded to students who submit outstanding theses. The John H. Williams Prize is awarded to the honors senior graduating with the best overall record. This year, these three prizes were awarded to two students.

In addition senior theses may be eligible to win the Thomas Temple Hoopes Prize, given annually to students who exhibit outstanding scholarly work or research, and students may apply for prizes awarded to theses in various fields.  The Economics Department is proud to see that five concentrators were awarded the Hoopes prize as well as winners of the Captain John Fay Prize, John Dunlop Prize, and Harvard Environmental Economics Program Prize.

Molly Wharton Molly Wharton '17 was awarded the Seymour E. and Ruth B. Harris Prize and a Thomas Temple Hoopes Prize for her thesis, "Measuring the Trade-Migration Nexus in the United Kingdom: Where People Go, the Goods Will Flow." She was also awarded the John H. Williams Prize for student with the best overall record by the Economics Department.
Daniel Tartakovsky Daniel Tartakovsky '17 was awarded the Allyn A. Young Prize, a Thomas Temple Hoopes Prize, and the Captain John Fay Prize for outstanding, imaginative work for his thesis, "Gender Differences in Reactions to Setbacks: Evidence from High School Debate Competitions."
Dhruva Bhat Dhruva Bhat '17 was awarded the John Dunlop Prize, given to the best thesis on a challenging public policy issue at the interface of business and government, for his thesis, "'Harbinger of a New Era'? Evaluating the Effect of India’s Right to Education Act on Learning Outcomes."
Joe Choe Joe Choe '17 was awarded the Thomas Temple Hoopes Prize for his thesis, "Spillovers in Spain: Examining the Effect of Multinational Firms on Domestic Industry Productivity."
Winston Huang Winston Huang '17 was awarded the Thomas Temple Hoopes Prize for his thesis, "A Comparison of the Effects of Waiver Medicaid Expansions and Traditional Medicaid Expansions Under the Affordable Care Act."
David Matthews David Matthews '17 was awarded the Thomas Temple Hoopes Prize for his thesis, "'Stand Your Ground' Laws: A Quantitative Analysis of the Impact on Crime and Implications for Public Policy."
Austin Tymins

Austin Tymins was awarded a Harvard Environmental Economics Program Prize for best research papers addressing a topic in environmental, energy, or natural-resource economics for his thesis, "Economies of Shale: Quantifying the Economics Benefits of Fracking Through Asset Prices."

 

 

 

Claudia Goldin Awarded Honorary Degree by European University Institute

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European University Institute has awarded Professor Claudia Goldin for her exceptional contributions to economics."Claudia Goldin is one of the most outstanding economists in the world. She has made a large number of contributions to our understanding of major social and economic issues, such as slavery, the economic impact of war, the position of women in the labour market, income inequality, technological change, and education. " said Michèle Belot, EUI Professor of Economics. "Her work has inspired thousands of researchers around the world," she added.
Claudia Goldin © Bryce Vickmark
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