event
GTDW Seminar Series
Monday
14
December
Dave Donaldson

Exports, Imports, and Earnings Inequality: Micro-Data and Macro-Lessons From Ecuador

Dave Donaldson, Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
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Webinar streamed via Zoom

The Geneva Trade and Development Workshop (GTDW) is a joint seminar series of the Geneva School of Economics and Management (GSEM), the Graduate Institute in Geneva (IHEID), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and the World Trade Organization (WTO). After twelve years of running as an on-site seminar, we are joining forces with the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) to bring the GTDW online to share frontier research in trade and development.

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As part of the Geneva Trade and Development Workshop (GTDW) seminar series, the Graduate Institute in Geneva (IHEID) and our partners are pleased to invite you to a public talk given by Dave Donaldson, Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

Professor Donaldson will present his paper Exports, Imports, and Earnings Inequality: Micro-Data and Macro-Lessons From Ecuador, coauthored with Rodrigo Adão, Paul Carrillo, Arnaud Costinot and Dina Pomeranz.

 

About the speaker

Dave Donaldson teaches and carries out research on trade, both international and intranational, with applications in the fields of International Economics, Development Economics, Economic History, Environmental Economics, Urban Economics, and Agricultural Economics. 

He has studied, among other topics: the welfare and other effects of market integration, the impact of improvements in transportation infrastructure, how trade might mediate the effects of climate change, and how trade affects food security and famine. This work has been awarded the 2017 John Bates Clark Medal, given by the American Economic Association to the US-based economist “under the age of forty who is judged to have made the most significant contribution to economic thought and knowledge”, as well as an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship and several grants from the National Science Foundation.

He currently serves as a co-editor at Econometrica and previously at American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, and as a program director (for Trade) at the International Growth Centre.  He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.  A native of Toronto, Canada, Donaldson obtained an undergraduate degree in Physics from Oxford University and a PhD in Economics from the London School of Economics.