Alan Deardorff
(Redirected from
Alan V. Deardorff
)Alan V. Deardorff (born 1944) is the John W. Sweetland Professor of International Economics and a Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the University of Michigan Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, Ann Arbor.[1] Deardorff received his Ph.D. in Economics from Cornell University in 1971.[1]
Deardorff is the author of Deardorffs' Glossary of International Economics, as well as the Family Tree of Trade Economists. He has undertaken work on
commodities or pairs of commodities in a many-commodity world", but stating that "that the law is nonetheless valid if restated in terms of averages across all commodities".[2]
Current Affiliations
- External Fellow, Leverhulme Centre for Research on Globalisation and Economic Policy, University of Nottingham.
- Faculty Associate, William Davidson Institute, University of Michigan
- International Research Fellow, Kiel Institute of World Economics
- Member, Academic Council, VRCenter DEGIT, Institute for World Economics, Kiel University
- Member, American Economic Association
- Member, Board of Editors, North American Journal of Economics and Finance
- Member, Editorial Advisory Board, International Economic Journal
- Member, Editorial Advisory Board, The World Economy
- Member, Editorial Board, Journal of Economic Integration
- Member, Editorial Board, Journal of International Economic Law
- Member, Editorial Board, Studies in International Economics, University of Michigan Press
- Member, Group of Eminent Persons on Non-tariff Barriers, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
References
- ^ a b Alan V. Deardorff University of Michigan, Department of Economics, Faculty
- ^ Deardorff, A. V., The General Validity of the Law of Comparative Advantage, The Journal of Political Economy, Volume 88, No. 5 (Oct., 1980), pp. 941-957
External links