event
GTDW Seminar Series
Monday
05
October
Nina Pavcnik

FDI Inflows and Domestic Firms: Adjustments to New Export Opportunities

Nina Pavcnik, Niehaus Family Professor of International Studies and Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College
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Seminar 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 Nina Pavcnik, Niehaus Family Professor of International Studies and Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College.

Professor Pavcnik will present her joint research with Brian McCaig and Woan Foong Wong, titled FDI Inflows and Domestic Firms: Adjustments to New Export Opportunities.

 

About the speaker

Nina Pavcnik is Niehaus Family Professor of International Studies and Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College. Her research interests are at the intersection of international trade, economic development, and industrial organization. Her recent work has focused on the consequences of trade reforms for firms and labor markets in less developed countries. She is a NBER Research Associate, CEPR Research Affiliate, and BREAD Senior Fellow. She currently serves as an associate editor for the American Economic Review, the Journal of Development Economics and the Journal of International Economics. She has consulted for the World Bank and the Inter American Development Bank. She received a B.A. in Economics from Yale University in 1994 and earned a Ph.D. in Economics from Princeton University in 1999.