Faculty and Staff
Tahir R. S. Andrabi, Professor of Economics
Tahir Andrabi analyzes the education of young women in Pakistan, the economics of international borrowing and the export performance of developing nations; and is doing joint work with professor Kuehlwein on the effects of railways on market integration and famines in British India.
Peter Bergevin, Lecturer in Economics
Peter Bergevin specializes in managerial accounting and financial analysis; and the role of accounting information in decision making.
Eleanor P. Brown, James Irvine Professor of Economics
Eleanor Brown ’75, is a specialist in the areas of charitable giving, volunteer labor, and the nonprofit sector.
Ludwig B. Chincarini, Assistant Professor of Economics
Ludwig Chincarini specializes in portfolio management, quantitative equity management, and derivatives. His research interests include portfolio strategies, investment tax issues, and derivatives, and hedge funds.
Cecilia Conrad, Stedman-Sumner Professor of Economics
Cecilia Conrad studies and writes about poverty among women and families.
Bo Cutter, Associate Professor of Economics
Bowman Cutter’s research spans a range of environmental topics, including: market-based environmental regulation, the political economy of environmental policy, groundwater valuation, water quality issues, and land use.
Pierangelo De Pace, Assistant Professor of Economics
Pierangelo De Pace’s research deals in empirical macroeconomics and finance. He focuses on issues relating to business cycle synchronization, the leading properties of the term structure of interest rates for real economic activity, the dynamic behavior of nominal interest rates and interest rate spreads, and the statistical and cyclical characteristics of disaggregated international capital flows.
Glenn Hueckel, Adjunct Professor of Economics
Glenn Hueckel studies and writes on the history of economic theory and is an Adam Smith scholar.
John Jurewitz, Lecturer in Economics
John Jurewitz studies environmental and natural resource economics and specializes in energy economics and policy.
Michael Kuehlwein, George E. and Nancy O. Moss Professor of Economics
Michael Kuehlwein focuses on theories of income tax overwithholding and is doing joint work with Professor Andrabi on the effects of railways on market integration and famines in British India.
James Lehman, Visiting Professor of Economics
James Lehman specializes in international trade and finance, trade and development policy, money and banking, and public finance. His research interests also include international trade policy and trade relations, trade sanctions, and trade and aid.
James D. Likens, Morris B. and Gladys S. Pendleton Professor of Economics
James Likens focuses on the financial services industry with an emphasis on credit unions.
Fernando Lozano, Associate Professor of Economics
Fernando Lozano is an applied labor economist who primarily focuses on immigration.
Stephen V. Marks, Chair, Professor of Economics
Stephen Marks serves as an adviser to the U.S. State Department and to the Indonesian Ministry of Trade on international trade policy and his research includes quantifying the effects of trade and other policies throughout the Indonesian economy.
June F. O’Leary, Lecturer in Economics
June O’Leary specializes in health economics, hospital competition and care outcomes.
Hans C. Palmer, Emeritus Professor of Economics
Slavi T. Slavov, Associate Professor of Economics – On Leave 2010-1011
Slavi Slavov’s current research deals with the impact of the Euro and other such monetary integration projects on inflation and on current account dynamics.
Gary N. Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics
Gary Smith’s research generally has either a finance or statistical angle, though he has also looked at the socioeconomic mobility of the daughters of immigrant mothers and used the gravity model to evaluate the site value of tribal casinos.
Michael Steinberger, Associate Professor of Economics
Michael Steinberger uses state of the art econometric methods to analyze wage differentials between different groups: men vs. women, college educated vs. high school graduate, and straight vs. gay and lesbian.