- About
- Prospective Students
- Undergraduate
- Graduate
- Programs
- Courses
- Mini course
- Advising
- Awards & funding
- Herbert G. Grubel Award
- James Dean Award
- Lang Wong Memorial Endowment Scholarship
- Meiyu Li Memorial Scholarship in Economics
- Peter Kennedy Memorial Graduate Entrance Scholarship in Economics
- Peter Kennedy Memorial Graduate Fellowship
- Richard G. Lipsey Award
- Terry Heaps Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award
- Shiva and Elizabeth Nanda Graduate Fellowship in Economics
- Shiva and Elizabeth Nanda Graduate Scholarship in Economics
- Job market candidates
- Graduate student profiles
- Student publications
- Research
- Community
- Teaching Assistant (TA) workshops
- Department Login
- Events
Research
Economics researchers awarded 2020 SSHRC Insight Grants
Congratulations to professor Krishna Pendakur and associate professor Chris Bidner whose projects have been awarded
Insight Grants aim to build knowledge and understanding about people, societies and the world. By supporting and fostering excellence in social sciences and humanities research, the program deepens, widens and increases our collective understanding of individuals and societies, as well as informing the search for solutions to societal challenges.
Bidner and Pendakur were among the 18 researchers from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) who successfully received SSHRC Insight Grants for their projects.
Associate Professor
Project title: Unbundling Female Empowerment
In a joint collaboration with professor from the University of British Columbia (UBC)s Vancouver School of Economics, Bidners research project on Unbundling Female Empowerment received a SSHRC Insight Grant worth $250,000. The project aims to expand our understanding of gender issues in the context of developing countries by carefully and systematically unbundling the various components of female empowerment. The insights gained from this project will help inform international development policy initiatives to promote gender equality and female empowerment.
Professor
Project title: Short Panel Analysis of Household Models
The objectives of Pendakurs research on household decision-making and consumption in Bangladesh and Malawi are threefold: to design a more dynamic collective household model, to develop new econometric techniques, and to create public-use datasets for further research. The outcomes from Pendakurs project will have applications beyond academia. The methods developed will allow policy makers to engage in consumer choice analyses more closely, and make the prediction of useful policy objects such as inflation rates more accurate and robust.