2
Joint papers with Christopher
About
Michael is an Assistant Professor in the Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics at the University of Chicago. He earned his PhD in Economics from Stanford with a dissertation titled “Essays in Applied Microeconomics” — recipient of the Forman Family Fellowship for top first-year Stanford Economics PhD students. His research is in applied microeconomics — industrial organization, the economics of education, and public economics. He and Christopher are long-running coauthors on the equilibrium effects of public-school provision in the New Haven school expansion, which produced the QJE study of competitive effects and the working paper on equilibrium effects of public provision in education markets.
Background
- Industrial Organization
- Economics of Education
- Public Economics
- Empirical Methods
Education
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PhD, Economics
· Stanford University
Essays in Applied Microeconomics
Career
- Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Chicago, Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics (present)
Joint work with Christopher
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The Competitive Effects of Improved Public Provision: Evidence from a Large School Expansion Program
2019
Working papers / in progress