A new working paper by professor Juan Carlos Suárez Serrato and co-authors looks at the results of $300 billion dollar tax break that was meant to boost both hiring and wages. read more about A $300 Billion Business Tax Break Meant to Raise Wages is Instead Helping Companies Replace Workers with Machines, Study Says »
Professor Vincent Conitzer was recently inducted as a Fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI), for his contributions to the field of artificial intelligence. Conitzer has a secondary appointment in economics. read more about Professor Vincent Conitzer Elected Fellow for Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence »
Several Duke Economics faculty members received 2019 Intellectual Community Planning Grants. The offices of the Vice Provost for Interdisciplinary Studies and the Executive Vice Provost oversee this seed grant program, and the grant funding covers the cost of food, meeting venues, external speakers or other meeting costs, and exploratory research into potential collaborators at Duke and elsewhere. read more about Faculty to Pursue Collaborations through 2019 Intellectual Community Planning Grants »
Professor Timur Kiran's concept of "preference falsification" is cited in an article that discusses the value of one's opinion. read more about Does Your Opinion Define You? »
A new study by Professor Matthias Kehrig and Nicolas Vincent of Université de Montréal explores how much compensation labor gets in U.S. manufacturing, read more about One Cheerful Explanation for Why Workers’ Share of Income is Shrinking »
Professor Sandy Darity is quoted in response to Elizabeth Warren's plan to combat the housing inequality crisis in the United States. read more about How Elizabeth Warren is Taking on America's Housing Affordability Crisis »
New research by professor Marcos Rangel and co-author Ying Shi of Stanford shows that children immigrants to the U.S. study more math and science, which leads them to more STEM careers. read more about Study: Immigrant Kids Deliberately Build STEM Skills »
Duke Econ's Administrative Manager Lori Zagiba was recently interviewed to talk about her experience with Duke's Leadership Academy. read more about Enduring Lessons of Leadership »
It’s that time of year, the first weekend in January when thousands of economists descend in droves on an unsuspecting city. This year the city is Atlanta, and Duke faculty and graduate students are attending the 2019 Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association (AEA) on Jan. 4-6. They will be presenting or participating as chairs, co-authors, discussants, and panelists, while Ph.D job market candidates will interview for jobs throughout the weekend. Below is a list of work authored or co-… read more about Faculty and Grad Students Attend 2019 AEA Conference »
Professor Craig Burnside comments on economic implications regarding recent White House actions concerning the proposed border wall. read more about Economists, Business Owners Worry About Impact of Potential Border Closure »
Josh Berman never expected Janet Yellen to respond. The first-year emailed the former chair of the Federal Reserve about a project he was doing for Professor Bruce Caldwell’s Freedom and the History of Economics class. The first email he sent to an address he found online bounced. His second email, this time sent to a different email address, got a response. He asked Yellen if she had time to answer some questions about her background in economics and professional life. He left his phone number and signed the… read more about First-Year Strikes Up Unlikely Friendship with Janet Yellen »
Vladimir G. Treml, Professor of Economics at Duke University from 1967-1999, died on November 9, 2018. He was 89 years old. Treml was an expert in the field of Soviet economics, and his impact on the field has been far-reaching. Treml was born in Kharkiv (Kharkov) in Ukraine, in what was then the Soviet Union. He and his family escaped to Prague during World War II and after lived in Austria and Germany. Treml immigrated to the United States in 1950 and married his wife, Emma, in 1952. He served… read more about In Memoriam: Vladimir G. Treml »
Senator Cory Booker gets behind professor William Darity's idea of "baby bonds", where at birth every American is given a cash account that could be used in adulthood to climb the ladder of economic success. read more about Booker’s Ambitious Proposal to Close the Racial Wealth Gap »
Professor Emma Rasiel has been appointed as the as the Eads Professor of the Practice in Energy by the Duke University Energy Initiative and Fuqua School of Business. read more about Rasiel appointed as Eads Professor of the Practice in Energy »
The Duke Economics Department is pleased to announce that professor Peter Arcidiacono has been named as one of the 22 new Fellows of the Econometric Society for 2018. The Econometrics Society is an international, independent society for the advancement of economic theory by using statistics and mathematics. They are responsible for the publication of the journals Econometrica, Quantitative Economics, and Theoretical Economics, as… read more about Professor Peter Arcidiacono Named as 2018 Fellow of the Econometric Society »
Professor Rafael Dix-Carneiro's recent paper on economic effects on local crime rates in Brazil was featured as the AEA Chart of the Week. read more about AEA Chart of the Week: Economic Shocks and Crime: Evidence from the Brazilian Trade Liberalization »
Duke University will host its first multidisciplinary conference on international development on Nov. 15 and 16 in Perkins Library and Penn Pavilion. Duke Economics is a co-sponsor of the event. The conference, “The New Building Blocks of Development,” will feature Duke faculty from across the university as well as colleagues from other universities and experts from international organizations and nonprofits. read more about Duke Economics to Co-Sponsor Inaugural Conference on International Development »
A new report co-authored by professor Erica Field highlights the economic benefit of women having access to and owning mobile phones. read more about Can Smartphones for Women in Chhattisgarh Help in Economic Development? »
A new study by Professor Emma Rasiel shows that law schools have cut class sizes and offered tuition discounts that lowered the average inflation-adjusted cost of a law degree by 6 percent. read more about Average Price of a JD Drops Amid Declining Class Sizes, Costing $1.5B a Year in Lost Tuition »
Professor Timur Kiran comments on the recent vow by Turkey's Erdogan to continue purchasing Iranian natural gas despite sanctions imposed by the United States read more about Turkey Vows To Buy Iranian Energy, Setting Up Possible Confrontation With U.S. »
Duke Economics is pleased to welcome postdoctoral associate Bocar Ba to the department for the 2018-2019 school year. Ba grew up in France, and then moved to Canada, where he did his undergraduate degree. He then did his doctoral studies at the University of Chicago, where he graduated with his Ph.D. in public policy. Ba’s research is focused on economics of crime and labor economics, and has always been interested in learning more about how the two intersect. “I realized that no one was… read more about Duke Economics Welcomes Bocar Ba »
The sun was hot and the drinks were cold as the Economics Graduate Student Committee (EGSC) threw the first-ever Homecoming Happy Hour. Faculty, staff, students, and alumni gathered behind the Social Sciences building to mingle and reminisce about their days in Duke Economics. Normally, the EGSC plans Ph.D. happy hours once a month, but this year decided to incorporate homecoming into their event as a way to reach out to alumni and give current Ph.D. students a chance to mix and network with them. … read more about Duke Economics Hosts Homecoming Happy Hour »
Professor Martin D. Smith gives his opinion on the U.S. seafood trade deficit, and explains why the U.S. should run a seafood trade deficit. read more about The Seafood Trade Deficit is a Diversionary Tactic »
Professor Juan Carlos Suárez Serrato talks to the Duke Chronicle about his recent study that looks into how corporations are taking advantage of China's policy to incentivize research and development investment through tax cuts by relabeling their expenses as research and development, adding to the fiscal cost of the government. read more about Chinese companies leverage 'research and development' for tax cuts, study finds »
Professor William Darity discusses the effects of urban unrest due to racial wealth inequality. read more about Racial Wealth Inequality Overlooked as Cause of Urban Unrest, Study Says »
The Center for the History of Political Economy recently welcomed a new cohort of HOPE Scholars. Every year, scholars from around the globe come to the Center to share their ideas, theories, and research on the history of political economy. Scholars come for either a semester or a full academic year. They spend their time working on their research, participating in HOPE Center events, and interacting with others in the history of political economy discipline. The mission of the Center for the History of Political Economy is… read more about Center for the History of Political Economy Welcome HOPE Fellows »
Duke Economics welcomed 92 new Master’s students to Durham on August 20th. This year’s cohort boasts students from Bulgaria, Chile, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Korea, Netherlands, New Zealand, Thailand, and the United States. Students are in one of four programs--MAE, M.A. analytical political economy (MAPE), M.S. quantitative financial economics (MQFE), and M.S. economics and computation (MSEC). In terms of specific programs, MAE received 652 applicants and has 57 matriculants, MAPE received 93 applicants and has… read more about New Master’s Students Attend Orientation »
Professor Tim Bollerslev has been awarded the 2018 The Carlsberg Foundation Research Prize. Bollerslev, a professor in the Duke Financial Economics Center, was given the award based on his innovative work in the field of financial econometrics. Bollerslev, along with Poul Nissen of Aarhus University, was presented with the award on Sunday, September 2nd, at a ceremony at the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek art museum in Copenhagen, Denmark. The recipients were awarded the prize, which includes DKK 1 million, by the Crown Princess of… read more about Tim Bollerslev Awarded Carlsberg Foundation Research Prize »
Recent work by professors Juan Carlos Suárez Serrato and Daniel Xu measures real and relabelling responses to tax incentives for R&D in China. read more about How Relabelling Increases the Fiscal Cost of R&D Incentives »
The Department of Economics is pleased to welcome Dr. Lawrence Kreicher as the Gosnell Visiting Professor of Economics for the Duke Financial Economics Center (DFE). Kreicher comes to Duke from Dartmouth College, where he spent the last eight years teaching financial theory, financial institutions and markets, international finance and global macroeconomics. Similarly, Kreicher will be teaching ECON514 (Fixed Income Markets and Quantitative Methods) in the fall, and in the spring will be teaching a financial markets… read more about Lawrence Kreicher Joins Duke Financial Economics Center as the Gosnell Visiting Professor »