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Applied Economics

Wharton’s highly selective phd program in applied economics offers students many resources not available at other institutions, such as 1:1 faculty to student ratio, five years of funding, and minimal teaching requirements..

Combining the faculties of the departments of Real Estate and Business Economics & Public Policy, Wharton’s Applied Economics program leverages the breadth and depth of its faculty to prepare students for careers doing frontier theoretical and empirical research. Students can focus on a variety of research areas, including Behavioral Economics, Development and International Economics, Energy and Environmental Economics, Health Economics, Industrial Organization and Regulation, Labor Economics, Law and Economics, Market Design, Public Economics, Risk and Insurance, Urban Economics and Real Estate. You can find the list of Applied Economics Faculty here.  Students may also develop an inter-disciplinary focus by taking courses and working with faculty in some of the other departments at Wharton such as Finance, Health Care Management, Management, and Marketing.

For more information on courses, please visit the University Graduate Catalog .

Sample Schedule

The course of study for the Ph.D. in Applied Economics requires the completion of 15 graduate course units. The common core consists of 3 theory courses and 3 statistics/econometrics courses. Students are also expected to master two field areas by passing two courses in each (total of 4 courses units). The remaining course units necessary to achieve 15 are split between the mandatory graduate student research seminars and other electives.

ADMISSIONS AND FINANCIAL AID

Students will apply for admission to the Wharton Program in Applied Economics, and may, if they wish, indicate a preferred field of study in their application. All else equal, the admissions committee may consider field choice in determining admission. Fellowship support will be in accordance with usual Wharton and University guidelines.

CORE REQUIREMENTS

Students will be required to master core materials in economic theory covering the topics of household decision-making, production theory, theory of markets and market failure, game theory, decision-making under uncertainty, and resource allocation in dynamic economies. The following courses will satisfy the three-course economic theory requirement:

Microeconomic Theory I: ECON 7010 Microeconomic Theory II: ECON 7110 Macroeconomic Theory: ECON 7200 or 7210 or FNCE 9240

Students will be required to master core materials in applied econometrics covering the topics of statistical inference, linear regression analysis, panel regression analysis, and estimation of models using discrete dependent variables. The following courses will satisfy the three-course econometric/statistics requirement:

Econometrics: ECON 7300, FNCE 9260, ECON 8310 or ECON 7310, BEPP 9110 and BEPP 9310

FIELD REQUIREMENTS

In addition to the core theory and econometrics materials, students will be required to master two applied fields by passing two courses in each field. Students will be free to offer their own field as a substitute with approval of the graduate group chair and (when relevant) an appropriate advisor from another Wharton graduate group.

• Development Economics BEPP 9410: Development Economics • Industrial Economics and Business Regulation: BEPP 9870: Industrial Organization and Competition Policy HCMG 9020: Special Topics of Health Services Research: Industrial Organization of Health Care ECON 8450: Empirical Methods in Industrial Organization • Market Design BEPP 9710: Market Design • Public Economics and Political Economy: BEPP 9330: Public Economics: Social Insurance & Government Expenditures HCMG 9030: Public Policy ECON 8410: Public Economics I ECON 8411: Public Economics II • Urban Economics and Real Estate: REAL 9450: Urban and Real Estate Economics REAL 9460: Advanced Topics in Urban Economics REAL 9470: Advanced Real Estate and Urban Economics • Behavioral Economics: BEPP 9040: Experimental Economics: Methods and Applications OIDD 9000: Foundation of Decision Processes OIDD 9040: Experimental Economics

In addition, all students must take elective courses to achieve the necessary 15 Course Credits to be eligible for Dissertation Status.

During the second and third year of the program students will be required to attend and actively participate in the graduate student research seminar. Students will also be responsible for presenting a paper of original research to the seminar before entering dissertation status. All students will also be required to attend the faculty Applied Economics Workshop during the 2nd and 3rd years.

BEPP 9000: Research Seminar BEPP 9620: Applied Economics Seminar

QUALIFYING EXAM

At the end of first year (usually in last week of May or first week of June), students are expected to take and pass the qualifying exam for Microeconomic Theory and the qualifying exam for Econometrics. These exams are written and graded by the Wharton Applied Economics PhD Committee. If a student fails in one qualifying exam, another opportunity to take that exam will be given at the end of the second year.

Students can also request a waiver for one or both exams if they perform well in the courses associated with each exam. A satisfactory performance for Microeconomic Theory, for example, corresponds to having at least a B- or better in each micro course, and an average of B or better.

FACULTY ADVISORS

Students are required to select or are assigned two faculty advisors in the beginning of the second year in the program. Because the student will not have had all of the major field courses at that time, it is possible that a student will later decide to change advisors; such an eventuality will be considered a normal outcome. In addition, since students will not have had all of the major field course work by June of their first year, they should “read ahead” in their chosen fields to begin identifying a research topic for the Second Year Paper. Students are expected to initiate meetings with faculty members to discuss possible research topics, and these meetings should begin as early as possible after the student enters the program and are part of the process of getting to know the faculty and learning about the field.

CANDIDACY PAPER

The Program in Applied Economics provides students with several opportunities to conduct research. All students are required to write a candidacy paper in their second year to be submitted in the summer of the second year in the program. This paper should demonstrate the student’s ability to conduct PhD quality research. This is often used as the Master’s Thesis submission- and, as the title implies, it is one of the requirements for admission to Doctoral candidacy.

The deadline for submission of the Candidacy Paper is strictly enforced, and failure to complete and submit the paper by the deadline (July 15 of the end of the student’s second year in the program) is grounds for dismissal from the program. The paper must be submitted to the faculty members who are the student’s principal advisors for the project, as well as to the Doctoral Coordinator. A copy of the candidacy paper, together with letters from two faculty members noting approval of it, must be in each student’s file in the Program office prior to the start of the student’s fifth term (typically the start of the third year). Failure to fulfill this requirement may result in the student being dropped from the program.

The main objective of the candidacy paper is to demonstrate the student’s ability to do original research. Often the Candidacy Paper is submitted for publication, and it can also serve as the foundation for PhD research, possibly as a dissertation essay. The Candidacy Paper must be solely authored by the student, not co-authored with the faculty advisor.

Milestones on the road to the candidacy paper are as follows:

September of 2nd year in the program Fall semester, 2nd year Spring semester, 2nd year Faculty advisors selected Candidacy Paper proposal Work on Candidacy paper Submit final version of Candidacy Paper

ADMISSION TO CANDIDACY Before admission to candidacy, the student is required to:

  • Complete all required coursework, including all core courses, with at least a B + or better in each course and with an average GPA of B+ or better. (For some courses, a passing grade on a qualifying exam can substitute for a grade below B.)
  • Pass both qualifying exams or request exam waivers.
  • Submit a satisfactory candidacy paper

THE PHD DISSERTATION The best ways to find a dissertation topic is to talk to the program faculty and read the literature. Discussions with faculty can range from “cold calls,” where the student asks the faculty member for topic suggestions, to more proactive visits where the student discusses potential topic ideas that have come up in course work or research seminars. Students should also take a close look at recent dissertations written by students in their major field as well as dissertations written by students from other Wharton departments.

There are two primary models for the organization of dissertations. The “single study” traditional dissertation, and the essay approach. In the latter approach, two or three essays are generally found acceptable by the student’s dissertation committee, depending on length and quality. Dissertation essays are more prevalent for a number of reasons, including most importantly, (a) the Candidacy Paper may be permitted to constitute a substantial part of one essay, (b) an essay can be used as an interview paper (see discussion below), and (c) if properly structured, an essay can often be converted into a paper to be submitted to a journal. Whether two or three essays are appropriate depends on the length and complexity of the research undertaken and is determined by the student’s dissertation committee.

Dissertation essays may be co-authored, although the extent to which this is appropriate will depend on each student’s topic, doctoral committee, and faculty advisor. A circumstance where a co -authored essay might be appropriate could arise from a joint research project with a faculty member. However, the student’s dissertation must include at least one essay that is solely authored by the student. The dissertation process must begin with the selection of a principal advisor or co-advisors. Each student is responsible for this selection, and then the student works with the advisor(s) to select the dissertation topic and begin exploratory research. The student and advisor then work together to select committee members. Committee members can be approached to join the committee by either the student or the principal advisor(s). The student should work with the advisor(s) to arrange a mutually agreeable procedure. The student should review the Wharton Doctoral Programs Policies and Procedures, to be sure that the committee structure satisfies the overall requirements of the Wharton Doctoral Program.

Important: the PhD Dissertation proposal must be defended before the end of the fourth year in the program. Failure to defend can result in dismissal from the program.

GOING ON THE JOB MARKET The ultimate objective of the Wharton Doctoral Program is to prepare our students for a teaching and research career, ideally at a college or university. Because the placement process for academic jobs is lengthy, students should become familiar with it well in advance of the “job market year.” The program provides full support for students going on the job market, and a series of meetings and timelines are provided to the students during the fourth and fifth years in the program.

PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION The program will be administered by the graduate group in Applied Economics. Primary appointments in the Departments of Business Economics and Public Policy and Real Estate will be automatic members of the graduate group and comprise the initial membership of the graduate group. The graduate group can extend membership to other Wharton and University faculty as they consider appropriate. The graduate group will decide on its preferred administrative structure. Currently, the chairs of the departments of Real Estate and Business Economics and Public Policy are responsible for jointly appointing a PhD Coordinator that will serve a two-year term, with the option to renew it for another two years. The PhD Coordinator is also the representative for the group to the Doctoral Executive Committee.

STUDENT INVOLVEMENT Students are expected to spend full-time on their coursework and research during the first two years of the program. In subsequent years, students are expected to work with faculty, preferably as research assistants or co-authors, thereby gaining the experience required to be successful researchers. Students are also required to TA a core course (any alternatives will need to be approved by the PhD Coordinator) each in their 3rd year and 4th year of the program as a funding requirement. Other activities that further the student’s research careers are encouraged, subject to the approval of the doctoral coordinator (this includes teaching assistant positions). Failure to communicate with the doctoral coordinator about a research assistant or teaching job may result in cancellation of your scholarship.

Get the Details.

Visit the Applied Economics site for details on program requirements and courses. Read faculty and student research and bios to see what you can do with an Applied Economics PhD.

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Economics, PhD

The graduate economics program at Penn is a Ph.D. program administered by the Graduate Group in Economics, which consists of the faculty of the Department of Economics, and some of its secondary appointments in the Wharton School and the School of Arts and Sciences. A master's program in Economics is not offered at the University of Pennsylvania.

The program trains students to conduct outstanding research in economics. All major areas of economics are covered, with particular strengths in theoretical and empirical microeconomics, and in modern macroeconomics. Graduates of the program obtain positions at leading universities, research institutions, and government agencies around the world.

Students in this program first acquire a thorough knowledge of economic theory and econometric methods before they begin their own research. They meet a series of requirements during their first years in the program, and thereafter devote most of their time to the writing of a dissertation. The median length of time required for completion is 5.25 years (however both shorter and longer periods are possible). Almost all students are supported by combinations of fellowships, research assistantships, and teaching assistantships during at least their first five years of study.

For more information: http://economics.sas.upenn.edu/graduate

View the University’s Academic Rules for PhD Programs .

Required Courses

A minimum of 16 course units are required. A minimum of 12 course units must be taken at the University of Pennsylvania.

The degree and major requirements displayed are intended as a guide for students entering in the Fall of 2023 and later. Students should consult with their academic program regarding final certifications and requirements for graduation.

Sample Plan of Study

By the end of the 3rd year in residence, students must have passed four 7000-level ECON courses (excluding 7100, 7110, 7200, 7210, 7300, 7310, 8100, 9110, 9200, 9300, 9400 and 9450, the workshops) with a grade of A- or higher. Credits must total 16 before going on dissertation status.

The Empirical requirement is often fulfilled after students finish taking the four upper level courses requirement.

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Predoctoral researchers.

BEPP pre-doctoral researchers have gone on to PhD programs in Economics at:

  • UC Berkeley Economics
  • Northwestern Economics
  • Brown Economics
  • Michigan Economics
  • Chicago Booth Management

Pre-doctoral researchers have also taken jobs at the Federal Board of Governors, the private sector, and elsewhere.

BEPP pre-doctoral researchers have taken a variety of classes at Penn, including:

  • PhD Behavioral Economics
  • PhD Numerical Methods in Economics
  • PhD Empirical Public Policy
  • Undergraduate Linear Algebra
  • Undergraduate Bayesian Statistics

Stephanie Dodd

Address:  326 Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

Andrew Hinchberger

Address:  324 Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

Address:  326 Vance Hall Email:  [email protected]

Michael Partridge

Address:  337 Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

Adam Streff

Address:  324 Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

Danial Syed

Address:  347E Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

Address:  337 Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

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Maya Haran Address: 340 Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

Alon Rubinstein Address:  336 Vance Hall Email: [email protected]

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Wharton’s PhD program in Finance provides students with a solid foundation in the theoretical and empirical tools of modern finance, drawing heavily on the discipline of economics.

The department prepares students for careers in research and teaching at the world’s leading academic institutions, focusing on Asset Pricing and Portfolio Management, Corporate Finance, International Finance, Financial Institutions and Macroeconomics.

Wharton’s Finance faculty, widely recognized as the finest in the world, has been at the forefront of several areas of research. For example, members of the faculty have led modern innovations in theories of portfolio choice and savings behavior, which have significantly impacted the asset pricing techniques used by researchers, practitioners, and policymakers. Another example is the contribution by faculty members to the analysis of financial institutions and markets, which is fundamental to our understanding of the trade-offs between economic systems and their implications for financial fragility and crises.

Faculty research, both empirical and theoretical, includes such areas as:

  • Structure of financial markets
  • Formation and behavior of financial asset prices
  • Banking and monetary systems
  • Corporate control and capital structure
  • Saving and capital formation
  • International financial markets

Candidates with undergraduate training in economics, mathematics, engineering, statistics, and other quantitative disciplines have an ideal background for doctoral studies in this field.

Effective 2023, The Wharton Finance PhD Program is now STEM certified.

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PhD Program

Wharton’s PhD program in Statistics provides the foundational education that allows students to engage both cutting-edge theory and applied problems. These include problems from a wide variety of fields within Wharton, such as finance, marketing, and public policy, as well as fields across the rest of the University such as biostatistics within the Medical School and computer science within the Engineering School.

Major areas of departmental research include: analysis of observational studies; Bayesian inference, bioinformatics; decision theory; game theory; high dimensional inference; information theory; machine learning; model selection; nonparametric function estimation; and time series analysis.

Students typically have a strong undergraduate background in mathematics. Knowledge of linear algebra and advanced calculus is required, and experience with real analysis is helpful. Although some exposure to undergraduate probability and statistics is expected, skills in mathematics and computer science are more important. Graduates of the department typically take positions in academia, government, financial services, and bio-pharmaceutical industries.

Apply online here .

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Phone: (215) 898-8222

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A world-class city filled with art and culture and an incredible campus that offers cutting edge resources–that’s what students receive at Penn Nursing. And that’s just the start. Penn Nursing and the wider university offer something for everyone, as well as a lifelong community.

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Penn Nursing is globally known for educating dynamic nurses—because our School values evidence-based science and health equity. That’s where our expertise lies, whether in research, practice, community health, or beyond. Everything we do upholds a through-line of innovation, encouraging our exceptional students, alumni, and faculty share their knowledge and skills to reshape health care.

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Penn Nursing is the #1-ranked nursing school in the world. Its highly-ranked programs help develop highly-skilled leaders in health care who are prepared to work alongside communities to tackle issues of health equity and social justice to improve health and wellness for everyone.

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Penn Nursing’s rigorous academic curricula are taught by world renowned experts, ensuring that students at every level receive an exceptional Ivy League education . From augmented reality classrooms and clinical simulations to coursework that includes experiential global travel to clinical placements in top notch facilities, a Penn Nursing education prepares our graduates to lead.

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Patricia D’Antonio, PhD, Transitions from Standing Faculty

Patricia D’Antonio, PhD, RN, FAAN , the Carol E. Ware Professor in Mental Health Nursing, Professor of Nursing, and an internationally recognized historian of nursing and leader in nursing education, will transition from her faculty role on June 30th, 2024.

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D’Antonio’s research demonstrates nurses’ strong influence on health, social mobility, diversity, and the development of cultural and health care norms. She has a record of accomplishment of consistent funding, including fellowships from the College of Physicians of Philadelphia and the American Academy of Nursing. She is a Senior Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics and has co-authored seven books. Her most recent work, Nursing with a Message: Public Health Demonstration Projects in New York City, 1920-1940 , was featured by the Rockefeller Archive Center and awarded the Choice Outstanding Academic title. Her work argues that nurses were central in promoting the current norms of primary care within a health care system that reflected and refracted political, gendered, racialized norms, and it highlights how nurses supported economically and racially marginalized families’ equitable access to services available to white, middle-class families. In her earlier book, American Nursing: A History of Knowledge, Power, and the Meaning of Work , D’Antonio drew on firsthand accounts by White and African American men and women nurses to discover how strong gender and racial hierarchies reinforced how these groups historically viewed themselves and each other and underscored the importance of forging a strong nursing identity to bridge some of the historical divides within systems of care and education.

From 2015-2023, D’Antonio served as Director of Penn Nursing’s Barbara Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing . From 2010-2020, she served as Chair of the Department of Family and Community Health. She championed and supported the development of faculty in their academic, research, and service roles. D’Antonio has impacted faculty, staff, and students with her deep knowledge of nursing and commitment to excellence. In her teaching, she helps students focus on using history to analyze contemporary issues in health care practice, health policy, and public health.

D’Antonio has received many awards including the President’s Award from the American Association for the History of Nursing; the Nursing Outlook Excellence in Policy Award; the 2015 Dean’s Award for Exemplary Citizenship; the M. Adelaide Nutting Award from the American Association for the History of Nursing; four American Journal of Nursing ‘Book of the Year’ awards; and was inducted into Sigma Theta Tau’s International Nurse Researcher Hall of Fame in 2018. She received her BS degree Boston College School of Nursing; her MSN from Catholic University of America; and her PhD from the University of Pennsylvania.

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Hooray for the 2024 graduating class, honorary doctorate for penn nursing professor, revolutionizing nurse work environment research, media contact, see yourself here.

Congratulations, #PennNursing Class of 2023! Your dedication, compassion, and resilience have paid off.

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MIT’s Master of Applied Science in Data, Economics, and Design of Policy program adds a public policy track

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MIT’s Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) and Department of Economics have announced an expansion of their jointly administered Master of Applied Science in Data, Economics, and Design of Policy (DEDP) program . This expansion adds a new public policy track to complement the existing international development track, opening up new avenues for student learning and research. 

Designed to tackle poverty alleviation and other pressing policy challenges in the United States and other high-income countries, the curriculum of the new track spans a diverse set of issues, from domestic concerns like minimum wage and consumer welfare to global matters including trade, climate change, and immigration. Applications for the public policy track will open this fall, with the inaugural cohort set to arrive on MIT’s campus in spring 2026.

The DEDP program, led by MIT professors and Nobel laureates Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, along with professors Sara Fisher Ellison and Benjamin Olken, was established with the mission of equipping diverse cohorts of talented professionals with the knowledge and skills to tackle poverty using evidence-based approaches. The new master’s degree track will support this mission while also underscoring the program’s commitment to addressing a broad array of critical challenges in the fight against poverty worldwide.

"The DEDP program has proven successful on many dimensions, and we are enthusiastic about leveraging its successes to address a broader set of social challenges,” says Ellison, a faculty lead for the program. “The public policy track will enable us to apply evidence-based methodology to poverty alleviation and other related issues in the context of high-income countries, as well. Given increasing levels of wealth and income inequality in these countries, we feel that the timing is opportune and the need is great."

The DEDP program distinguishes itself with an innovative admissions model that prioritizes demonstrated ability and motivation over traditional credentials, such as standardized tests and recommendation letters. To be eligible to apply to the master’s program, candidates must have earned a DEDP MicroMasters credential by passing five of the DEDP online courses. The courses are completely free to audit. Those who wish to earn a course certificate can pay a fee, which varies by the learner’s ability to pay, to take the proctored exam. While applications are reviewed holistically, performance in these classes is the primary factor in admissions decisions.

This approach democratizes access to higher education, enabling students from typically underrepresented backgrounds to demonstrate their potential for success. Notably, the program has welcomed many students from nontraditional backgrounds, such as a student who enrolled directly from high school (and who is now a second-year PhD student in economics at MIT), reflecting the ambition of its faculty directors to make higher education more accessible.

Sofia Martinez, a graduate of the class of 2023 and now co-founder of Learning Alliance , says, "Without the MicroMasters paving the way, applying to MIT or any similar institution would have been unthinkable for us. Initially, my aim in taking the online courses wasn't to pursue the residential program; it was only after witnessing my own progress that I realized the possibility wasn't so distant after all. This sentiment resonates with many in our cohort, which is truly humbling.”

Since its launch in 2020, the DEDP master’s program has conferred degrees to 87 students from 44 countries, showcasing its global reach and the success of its admissions model. Upon arriving on campus, students embark on an accelerated master's program. They complete a full course load in the spring, followed by a capstone project in the summer, applying the theoretical knowledge and practical skills gained through the program at research and policy organizations.

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Health Care Access & Coverage

Covering the Cure: Access and Payment for High-Cost Cell and Gene Therapies

A conversation with stacie dusetzina, phd, jarrod henshaw, and aaron kesselheim, md, jd, moderated by david grande, md, mpa.

New cell and gene therapies create the promise of curing debilitating conditions that were previously thought to be incurable. These highly specialized and highly personalized therapies come with price tags in the millions of dollars for a single treatment. For example, new treatments could cure sickle cell disease for some of the 100,000 Americans who live with the disease. However, the two approved treatments are between $2 and 3 million per dose. And projecting demand is challenging: some patients may be reluctant to undergo new treatment. How are public and private insurers thinking about paying for these therapies and how should they prepare for future breakthroughs? LDI’s expert panel will unpack the current landscape and options for increasing access to these treatments while creating sustainable payment strategies.

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Stacie Dusetzina, PhD

Professor, health policy and ingram professor of cancer research, vanderbilt university medical center.

upenn phd economics linkedin

Jarrod Henshaw

Senior vice president, chief innovation and supply chain officer, prime therapeutics.

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Aaron Kesselheim, MD, JD

Professor, medicine, harvard medical school.

David Grande

David Grande, MD, MPA (moderator)

Director of policy, leonard davis institute of health economics; associate professor of medicine, perelman school of medicine.

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  2. Research Ethics & Policy Series (REPS): Jonathan Kimmelman, PhD

  3. Strategy for selection at IIT in PhD Economics Programs #EconomicIITPhD #ugcneteconomics #economics

  4. NTA PHD ECONOMICS RESULT 2023❤️🙏😇 #phdeconomics #ntaexam #economics

  5. Strategy for selection at IIT in PhD Economics Programs #EconomicIITPhD #ugcneteconomics #economics

  6. Welcome New Wharton Faculty 2012

COMMENTS

  1. Graduate Program

    The graduate economics program at Penn is a Ph.D. program administered by the Graduate Group in Economics, which consists of the faculty of the Department of Economics, and some of its secondary appointments in the Wharton School and the School of Arts and Sciences.A master's program in Economics is not offered at the University of Pennsylvania.. The program trains students to conduct ...

  2. Min Kim

    About. I am a Ph.D. Candidate in Economics at the University of Pennsylvania. I work on topics in Macroeconomics and Household Finance with a focus on financial education parity and economic well ...

  3. Zach Weingarten

    I am a second-year PhD student in economics at the University of Pennsylvania. My research interests include topics in applied microeconomics involving education and labor. | Learn more about Zach ...

  4. M. Eymen Akın on LinkedIn: #upenn #phdeconomics #gradschoolbound

    10mo. I am thrilled to share that I have accepted an offer from the University of Pennsylvania to pursue my PhD in Economics! This is a dream come true for me, and I am deeply grateful to my ...

  5. Faculty

    Department of Economics The Ronald O. Perelman Center for Political Science and Economics 133 South 36th Street Suite 150 Philadelphia, PA 19104. Telephone: 215-898-7701

  6. Applied Economics

    The course of study for the Ph.D. in Applied Economics requires the completion of 15 graduate course units. The common core consists of 3 theory courses and 3 statistics/econometrics courses. Students are also expected to master two field areas by passing two courses in each (total of 4 courses units).

  7. Admissions Information to the Ph.D. Program in Economics

    In the Economics Graduate Group, we also ask that applicants discuss their relevant research experience, if any, that make Penn Economics a good fit for what you would like to accomplish in your PhD. Your statement can include specific fields of interests and specific faculty members that you think could be potential advisors. Deadline for ...

  8. Home

    Mathematics Economics senior Ara Patvakanian is featured in Penn Today April 24, 2024. Mathematics Economics senior Ara Patvakanian is featured in Penn Today's Who, What, Why segment. Research.com, a leading academic platform for researchers, has just released the 2024 Edition of their Ranking of Best Scientists in the field of Economics and ...

  9. Economics, PhD < University of Pennsylvania

    The graduate economics program at Penn is a Ph.D. program administered by the Graduate Group in Economics, which consists of the faculty of the Department of Economics, and some of its secondary appointments in the Wharton School and the School of Arts and Sciences. A master's program in Economics is not offered at the University of Pennsylvania.

  10. Elsie Peng

    Goldman Sachs. Jul 2023 - Present 11 months. New York, New York, United States. US Economics Team.

  11. Applied Economics Faculty

    Applied Economics Faculty. Faculty and student research is concentrated in several broad areas, including: behavioral economics, development and international economics, energy and environmental economics, health economics, industrial organization and regulation, labor economics, law and economics, market design, political economy, public ...

  12. Prakash Mishra

    Applied Economics PhD Student | Environmental Economist | Triathlete Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States 836 followers 500+ connections

  13. Devishi Sarda

    Graduate from the University of Pennsylvania with majors in Economics and Cognitive… · Experience: McKinsey & Company · Education: University of Pennsylvania · Location: New York · 500 ...

  14. Hanming Fang, PhD, Senior Fellow

    Hanming Fang, PhD is Joseph M. Cohen Term Professor of Economics and Professor of Health Care Management at the University of Pennsylvania, and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). He is an elected Fellow of the Econometric Society. Professor Fang is an applied microeconomist with broad theoretical and ...

  15. PhD Program

    PhD Program. Wharton's highly selective Ph.D. program in Applied Economics offers students many resources not available at other institutions, such as a 1:1 faculty to student ratio and an up-front guarantee of five years of funding with minimal teaching requirements. Combining the faculties of the departments of Real Estate and Business ...

  16. Graduate Student

    Aug 2015 - May 2022 6 years 10 months. 403 Kern Building. - Assistant for undergrad-level courses on macroeconomics, microeconomics, and labor economics. - I Developed an R routine to analyze the ...

  17. Predoctoral and Postdoctoral Researchers

    PhD Behavioral Economics; PhD Numerical Methods in Economics; PhD Empirical Public Policy; ... University of Pennsylvania 300 Vance Hall 3733 Spruce Street Philadelphia, PA 19104-6301 Phone: (215) 898-3015 Fax: (215) 898-7635. ... LinkedIn; YouTube; Instagram; Support Wharton

  18. Amanda Kreider, PhD, Associate Fellow

    Amanda Kreider, PhD is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania. She studies the economics of health insurance markets with a focus on public health insurance programs. She is especially interested in factors affecting health care access and coverage for low-income individuals ...

  19. Nitin Krishnan

    Penn Presidential PhD Fellow at University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA. Connect Prakash Mishra ... Phd student in economics at University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA ...

  20. PhD Program

    Wharton's PhD program in Finance provides students with a solid foundation in the theoretical and empirical tools of modern finance, drawing heavily on the discipline of economics. The department prepares students for careers in research and teaching at the world's leading academic institutions, focusing on Asset Pricing and Portfolio ...

  21. Rachel M. Werner, MD, PhD

    Rachel M. Werner, MD, PhD is the Executive Director of the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics. She is Professor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine as well as the Robert D. Eilers Professor of Health Care Management and Economics at the Wharton School and a physician at the Philadelphia VA. Over ...

  22. PhD Program

    PhD Program. Wharton's PhD program in Statistics provides the foundational education that allows students to engage both cutting-edge theory and applied problems. These include problems from a wide variety of fields within Wharton, such as finance, marketing, and public policy, as well as fields across the rest of the University such as ...

  23. Cynthia Chude, Associate Fellow

    Cynthia Chude is an MD/PhD candidate at Meharry Medical College and The Wharton School. She is a Bloomberg Scholar at Meharry Medical College. She is completing her training at the Wharton Department of Health Care Management and Economics. Before starting medical school, Chude worked as a research assistant at the University of Pennsylvania ...

  24. A New $250 Million Approach to Addressing Health Care Patients' Food

    University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine Professor and Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics Senior Fellow Kevin Volpp, MD, PhD, has become the Scientific Leader of a new national 10-year, $250 million research and advocacy program designed to find cost effective approaches to improving health through greater access to healthy food for patients with chronic conditions and ...

  25. Patricia D'Antonio, PhD, Transitions from Standing Faculty

    Patricia D'Antonio, PhD, RN, FAAN, the Carol E. Ware Professor in Mental Health Nursing, Professor of Nursing, and an internationally recognized historian of nursing and leader in nursing education, will transition from her faculty role on June 30th, 2024. May 22, 2024. D'Antonio's research demonstrates nurses' strong influence on ...

  26. MIT's Master of Applied Science in Data, Economics, and Design of

    MIT's Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) and Department of Economics have announced an expansion of their jointly administered Master of Applied Science in Data, Economics, and Design of Policy (DEDP) program.This expansion adds a new public policy track to complement the existing international development track, opening up new avenues for student learning and research.

  27. Covering the Cure: Access and Payment for High-Cost Cell and Gene

    A Conversation with Stacie Dusetzina, PhD, Jarrod Henshaw, and Aaron Kesselheim, MD, JD, moderated by David Grande, MD, MPA. 12:00p.m. - 1:00p.m. ET September 13, 2024 Virtual Event. New cell and gene therapies create the promise of curing debilitating conditions that were previously thought to be incurable. These highly specialized and ...