Transcript

January 2016

Richard W. Evanshttps://sites.google.com/site/rickecon/

Brigham Young University office: (801) 422-8303Department of Economics cell: (801) 669-3610167 FOB fax: (801) 422-0194Provo, Utah 84602 e-mail: [email protected]

Citizenship: USA

Education

The University of Texas at Austin Ph.D. Economics 2008

Dissertation: Three Essays on Openness, InternationalPricing, and Optimal Monetary Policy

Advisor: Russell Cooper

The University of Texas at Austin M.S. Economics 2005Brigham Young University M.A. Public Policy 2003Brigham Young University B.A. Economics 1998

Fields of Specialization

Macroeconomics, public economics, computational economics, international macroeconomics

Professional Experience

Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Brigham Young University (July 2008 – present)Co-Director and Co-Founder, BYU Macroeconomics and Computational Laboratory (January

2012 – present)Economist, Open Source Policy Center, American Enterprise Institute (June 2014 – present)Member, Utah Economic Council, Salt Lake City Chamber of Commerce (June 2010 – present)Board of Directors, Economic Club of Utah, a chapter of the National Association for Business

Economics (January 2014 – present)Dissertation Intern, Research Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas (June 2007 – August

2007)Research Consultant, Rose & Rose, P.C. law firm, under Daniel S. Hamermesh (June, December

2006)Graduate Research Assistant, Center for Population Economics, University of Chicago Gradu-

ate School of Business (May 2003 – May 2004)Staff Assistant, Joint Economic Committee of U.S. Congress (May 2002 – August 2002)Research Economist, Thredgold Economic Associates, Salt Lake City, Utah (March 1999 –

August 2001)Assistant Editor, Encyclia, the journal of the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters.

Was Assistant Editor on the publication of volumes 73 and 74 (January 1998 – March 1999)

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January 2016

Published Papers at Peer-reviewed Journals

“Determinants of Short-term Lender Location and Interest Rates,” joint with Taylor J. Canann,Journal of Financial Services Research, 48:3, pp. 235-262 (December 2015).

“OLG Life Cycle Model Transition Paths: Alternate Model Forecast Method,” joint with KerkL. Phillips, Computational Economics, 43:1, pp. 105-131 (January 2014).

“Is Openness Inflationary? Policy Commitment and Imperfect Competition.” Journal of Macro-economics, 34:4, pp. 1095-1110 (December 2012).

“The Fertility Effect of Catastrophe: U.S. Hurricane Births.” joint with Yingyao Hu and ZhongZhao, Journal of Population Economics, 23:1, pp. 1-36 (January 2010).

Book Chapters

“Personal Income” and “Gross Domestic Product by State”, 2015 Economic Report to theGovernor, Utah Economic Council, David Eccles School of Business, and Governor’s Officeof Management and Budget, pp. 31-38 (2015).

“Game Over: Simulating Unsustainable Fiscal Policy.” joint with Laurence J. Kotlikoff andKerk L. Phillips, Fiscal Policy After the Financial Crisis, eds. Alberto Alesina and FrancescoGiavazzi, National Bureau of Economic Research, University of Chicago Press (2013). [Clickhere for full NBER Working Paper version.]

Awards and Honors

Kuznets Prize for “The Fertility Effect of Catastrophe: U.S. Hurricane Births.” joint withYingyao Hu and Zhong Zhao for the best paper in the Journal of Population Economicsduring the three-year period from 2010 to 2012 out of 174 papers (June 2013 at the AnnualMeeting of the European Society for Population Economics in Aarhus, Denmark).

Works in Progress

“Macroeconomic Effects of a 10% Cut in Statutory Marginal Income Tax Rates on OrdinaryIncome,” joint with Jason DeBacker and Kerk L. Phillips (December 2015).

“The Natural Limits of Wealth Inequality and the Effectiveness of Tax Policy,” joint with ScottCondie and Kerk L. Phillips, under review (December 2015).

“Integrating a Microsimulation Model with a Dynamic General Equilibrium Model,” joint withJason DeBacker and Kerk L. Phillips (November 2015).

“Big Data Techniques as a Solution to Theory Problems,” joint with Kenneth L. Judd andKramer Quist, revise and resubmit, in Conquering Big Data with High Performance Com-puting, eds. Ritu Arora, Springer (October 2015).

“A Big Data Approach to Optimal Sales Taxation,” joint with Christian Baker, JeremyBejarano, Kenneth L. Judd, and Kerk L. Phillips, revise and resubmit, Journal of PublicEconomics (September 2015).

“The Distributional Effects of Redistributional Tax Policy,” joint with Jason DeBacker, EvanMagnusson, Kerk L. Phillips, Shanthi Ramnath, and Isaac Swift, revise and resubmit, Quan-titative Economics (September 2015).

“Estimating the Hourly Earnings Processes of Top Earners,” joint with Jason DeBacker, KerkL. Phillips, and Shanthi Ramnath (August 2015).

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January 2016

“Linearization about the Current State: A Computational Method for Approximating Nonlin-ear Policy Functions During Simulation,” joint with Kerk L. Phillips (August 2015).

“State-dependent Optimal Monetary Policy Rules,” joint with Christian Baker, (April 2014).“A Markov Regime-switching Approach to Estimating Health Cost Dynamics,” joint with

Jeffrey Humpherys and Matthew Webb (January 2014).“Openness and Inflation in the Long-run,” joint with David Beheshti (January 2014).

Research Grants

“A Macroeconomic Model for Dynamic Tax Scoring,” American Enterprise In- $60,000stitute (AEI) Open Source Policy Center (OSPC), joint with Kerk L.Phillips (July 2015 – June 2016).

“BYU Macroeconomics and Computational Laboratory Grant,” Brigham Young $133,235University Department of Economics and College of Family, Home, andSocial Sciences, joint with Kerk L. Phillips (March 2015 – April 2016).

“A Macroeconomic Model for Dynamic Tax Scoring,” American Enterprise In- $45,000stitute (AEI) Open Source Policy Center (OSPC), joint with Kerk L.Phillips (June 2014 – May 2015).

“BYU Macroeconomics and Computational Laboratory Grant,” Brigham Young $185,000University Department of Economics and College of Family, Home, andSocial Sciences, joint with Kerk L. Phillips (March 2014 – April 2015).

“TUES: A New Curriculum in Applied and Computational Math,” National $599,918Science Foundation, DUE-1323785, Jeffrey Humpherys (PI), Tyler Jarvis(Co-PI), Richard W. Evans (Co-PI), and Kevin Seppi (Co-PI) (Sep. 2013 –Aug. 2016).

“BYU Macroeconomics and Computational Laboratory Grant,” Brigham Young $170,782University Department of Economics and College of Family, Home, andSocial Sciences, joint with Kerk L. Phillips and David E. Spencer (March2013 – April 2014).

“Simulating Utah State Pension Reform,” American Action Forum, joint with $12,500Kerk L. Phillips (May 2012).

“BYU Computational Economics Mentored Research Grant,” Brigham Young $100,000University Department of Economics and College of Family, Home, andSocial Sciences, joint with Jeffrey Humpherys and Kerk L. Phillips (March2012 – April 2013).

“Mentoring Environment Grant (MEG): Modeling Macroeconomic Policies,” $18,090Brigham Young University, joint with Kerk L. Phillips and David E. Spencer(January 2012 – December 2013).

“The Term Structure of Short-term Credit: Theory and Evidence.” Consumer $22,770Credit Research Foundation, (December 2010 – October 2011).

“Perceptions of Disability: Personal, Medical, Administrative.” Center for $24,000Population Economics at the University of Chicago and the National Bureauof Economic Research, subgrant of National Institutes of Health programproject grant number P01 AG10120 (June 2004 – February 2005).

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January 2016

Working Papers at Official Outlets

“Macroeconomic Effects of a 10% Cut in Statutory Marginal Income Tax Rates on OrdinaryIncome,” joint with Jason DeBacker and Kerk L. Phillips, AEI Economic Policy WorkingPaper 2015-15 (December 2015).

“A Big Data Approach to Optimal Sales Taxation,” joint with Christian Baker, JeremyBejarano, Kenneth L. Judd, and Kerk L. Phillips, NBER Working Paper #20130, NationalBureau of Economic Research (May 2014).

“Game Over: Simulating Unsustainable Fiscal Policy.” joint with Laurence J. Kotlikoff andKerk L. Phillips, NBER Working Paper #17917, National Bureau of Economic Research(March 2012).

“Is Openness Inflationary? Imperfect Competition and Monetary Market Power.” GMPI Work-ing Paper #1, Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas(October 2007).

“The Fertility Effect of Catastrophe: U.S. Hurricane Births.” joint with Yingyao Hu and ZhongZhao, IZA Discussion Paper #2975, IZA: The Institute for the Study of Labor (August2007).

“Integration of the Surgeon’s Certificates with the Pension Application Groupings in the UnionArmy Dataset.” CPE Working Paper Series, Center for Population Economics, Universityof Chicago Graduate School of Business (August 2003). [CPE site link]

Conferences and Sessions Organized

BYU Computational Public Economics Conference 2015: Economic Modeling of Tax and Bud-get Policy. Park City, Utah, December 10-11, 2015.

Session,“Macroeconomic Modeling of Tax and Budget Policy.” Annual Conference on Taxation,National Tax Association, Boston Park Plaza Hotel, Boston, Massachusetts, November 19-21, 2015.

Session,“Mathematical Programming in Tax Policy Modeling.” 22nd International Symposiumon Mathematical Programming, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, July 12-17, 2015.

BYU Computational Public Economics Conference 2014: Economic Modeling with Asset Pric-ing. Park City, Utah, December 11-12, 2014.

Session, “Session 4: Modern Numerical Methods Applied to Economic Problems.” StanfordInstitute for Theoretical Economics (SITE), Summer 2014 Workshop, Stanford, California,joint with Kenneth Judd, Karl Schmedders, and Sevin Yeltekin, July 28–30, 2014.

Initiative for Computational Economics (ICE) 2014. Hoover Institution, Stanford University,joint with Kenneth Judd, Karl Schmedders, and Sevin Yeltekin, July 14-25, 2014.

Session, “Computational Solutions to Optimal Policy Problems.” American EconomicAssociation annual meeting, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, January 4, 2014.

BYU Computational Public Economics Conference 2013: Economic Modeling with Health andAging. Park City, Utah, December 12-13, 2013.

BYU Computational Public Economics Conference 2012. Park City, Utah, December 13-14,2012.

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January 2016

Presentations

“The Distributional Effects of Redistributional Tax Policy.” Albers School of Business, SeattleUniversity, Seattle, Washington, November 23, 2015.

“The Distributional Effects of Redistributional Tax Policy.” 22nd International Symposiumon Mathematical Programming, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, July 13, 2015.

“The Mind of Pete Carroll: Tax Policy, Inequality, and State Competitiveness.” keynote ad-dress at Annual Dinner of the Washington Research Council, Seattle, Washington, May 28,2015.

“OSPC Dynamic Scoring Model: An Open Source Model for Dynamic Revenue Estimates.”Congressional Budget Office, Washington, D.C., April 2, 2015.

“OSPC Dynamic Scoring Model: An Open Source Model for Dynamic Revenue Estimates.”PwC, Washington, D.C., April 2, 2015.

“OSPC Dynamic Scoring Model: An Open Source Model for Dynamic Revenue Estimates.”American Enterprise Institute, Washington, D.C., April 2, 2015.

“OSPC Dynamic Scoring Model: An Open Source Model for Dynamic Revenue Estimates.”Joint Committee on Taxation, Washington, D.C., April 1, 2015.

“U.S. Healthcare Spending Trends from Aggregated Monthly Claims Data.” Institute forFiscal Studies, Medical Spending Across the Developed World, London, England, March27, 2015.

“The Distributional Effects of Redistributional Tax Policy.” Utah State University, Logan,Utah, November 14,2014.

“A Big Data Approach to Optimal Sales Taxation.” Stanford Institute for TheoreticalEconomics (SITE), Summer 2014 Workshop, Stanford, California, July 30, 2014.

“A Big Data Approach to Optimal Taxation.” Tax Economists Forum, Hall of the States,Washington, DC, July 9, 2014.

“A Big Data Approach to Optimal Sales Taxation.” American Economic Associationannual meeting, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, January 4, 2014.

“A Markov Regime-switching Approach to Estimating Health Care Cost Dynamics.” BYUComputational Public Economics Conference 2013, Park City, Utah, December 12, 2013.

“Immiserating Fiscal Policy.” Hoover Institution Summer 2013 ComputationalEconomics Workshop, Stanford University, Stanford, California, July 30, 2013.

“A Big Data Approach to Optimal Sales Taxation.” Hoover Institution Summer 2013Computational Economics Workshop, Stanford University, Stanford, California,July 29, 2013.

“A Big Data Approach to Optimal Sales Taxation.” Society for Computational Economics,International Conference on Computing in Economics and Finance, Vancouver,British Columbia, July 12,2013.

“Surprises in the U.S. economy in 2012 and what might surprise in 2013.” Utah EconomicReview, Utah Economic Council, hosted by the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce and theWasatch Front Economic Forum, Salt Lake City, Utah, January 24, 2013.

“Europe in a Nutshell: Will it Crack? (Economy and Crisis Panel),” Center for the Studyof Europe, Wheatley Institution, and Kennedy Center for International Studies, BrighamYoung University, September 28, 2012

“U.S. Recovery, Interest Rates, European Debt/Banking Crisis, and Chinese Slowdown,”Association for Financial Professionals of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, July 26, 2012.

“Fiscal Multipliers and Time-inconsistent Preferences,” Quantitative Society for Pensionsand Savings, Summer Workshop, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, May 16, 2012.

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January 2016

“Fiscal Multipliers and Time-inconsistent Preferences,” Midwest Macro Meetings, NotreDame, Indiana, May 12, 2012.

“Determinants of Short-run Consumer Lending Interest Rates,” Wasatch Front EconomicForum luncheon, Salt Lake City, Utah, April 17, 2012.

“The Effects of the European Debt Crisis on the United States and Utah,” Utah EconomicReview, Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, Wasatch Front Economic Forum, Salt Lake City,Utah, January 12, 2012.

“When will the Social Security Trust Fund Run Out? Simulation by Linearization aroundthe Current State,” joint with Jeremy Perdue and Kerk Phillips, American EconomicAssociation Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois, January 6, 2012.

“Is the Euro Toast?” joint with Wade Jacoby, Center for the Study of Europe and KennedyCenter for International Studies, Brigham Young University, October 5, 2011.

“Game Over: Simulating and Quantifying Fiscal Limits,” joint with Laurence J. Kotlikoff andKerk L. Phillips. National Bureau of Economic Research, Fiscal Policy after theFinancial Crisis pre-conference, Boston, Massachusetts, July 15, 2011.

“OLG Life Cycle Model Transition Paths,” joint with Kerk L. Phillips. Society for Compu-tational Economics, 17th International Conference on Computing in Economics and Fi-nance, San Francisco, California, June 29, 2011.

“National Recovery, Fiscal Woes, No Inflation, and Bank Lending,” Utah CEO Forum, SaltLake Chamber of Commerce, Salt Lake City, Utah, April 28, 2011.

“Utah’s Fiscal Comparative Advantage Emerging from Recession,” Utah Economic Review,Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, Governors Office of Planning and Budget, Wasatch FrontEconomic Forum, Salt Lake City, Utah, January 19, 2011.

“Utah Exports and the World Economy,” Utah CEO Forum, Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce,Salt Lake City, Utah, September 21, 2010.

“Bailouts and Regulation,” joint with Scott Condie. Quantitative Society for Pensionsand Savings, Summer Workshop, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, May 20-21, 2010.

“Bailouts and Regulation,” joint with Scott Condie. Midwest Macro Meetings, MichiganState University, East Lansing, Michigan, April 30-May 2, 2010.

“The Cost of Capital: Monetary Policy, Government Spending, and Inflation Expectations,”ACG Utah (private equity association) 2010 Growth Conference and Capital Connection,Salt Lake City, Utah, March 12, 2010.

“OLG Life Cycle Models: New Solution Methods and Applications,” joint with Kerk Phillips.Quantitative Society for Pensions and Savings, Summer Workshop, May 21-22, 2009.

“The Current Economic Crisis,” with James R. Kearl and David E. Spencer, Brigham YoungUniversity, Provo, Utah, October 15, 2008.

“Openness and Inflation with Imperfect Competition: Theory and Evidence,” Office of TaxAnalysis, U.S. Department of the Treasury, Washington, D.C., January 2008.

“Openness and Inflation with Imperfect Competition: Theory and Evidence,” Department ofEconomics, University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, January 2008.

“Optimal Monetary Policy in a Two-country Overlapping Generations Model with ImperfectCompetition,” Midwest Macro Meetings, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Cleveland,Ohio, April 27–29, 2007.

“The Fertility Effect of Catastrophe: Myth or Measurable,” joint with Yingyao Hu. TexasEconometrics Camp XI, Huntsville, Texas, February 25–26, 2006.

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January 2016

Teaching Experience

Advanced Macroeconomic Theory and Computational Methods (Econ 413R), Brigham YoungUniversity (May 2012 – present)

Intermediate Macroeconomics (Econ 381), Brigham Young University (August 2008 – present)International Monetary Theory (Econ 459), Brigham Young University (August 2012 – present)Readings in Computational Economics (Econ 498R), Brigham Young University (Fall 2009,

Winter 2014)Readings in Dynamic Programming (Math 391R), Brigham Young University (Fall 2009)

Publications Worked on as Research Assistant

Burda, Michael, Daniel S. Hamermesh, and Philippe Weil. “Total Work and Gender: Facts andPossible Explanations.” Journal of Population Economics, 26:1 (January 2013) pp. 239-261.

Hamermesh, Daniel S., Caitlin Knowles Myers, and Mark Pocock. “Cues for Timing and Co-ordination: Latitude, Longitude, and Letterman.” Journal of Labor Economics 36:2 (April2008), pp. 223-46.

Hamermesh, Daniel S., “Direct Estimates of Household Production.” Economics Letters 98:1(January 2008), pp. 31-34.

Burda, Michael C., Daniel S. Hamermesh, and Philippe Weil. “The Distribution of Total Workin the EU and USA.” in Working Hours and Job Sharing in the EU and USA: Are Euro-peans Lazy? Or Americans Crazy? eds. Tito Boeri, Michael C. Burda, and Francis Kra-marz. Oxford University Press, pp. 12-91 (2008).

Hamermesh, Daniel S., “Time to Eat: Household Production under Increasing Income Inequal-ity.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 89:4 (November 2007), pp. 852-63.

Hamermesh, Daniel S., “The Time and Timing Costs of Market Work.” NBER Working Paper#13127 (May 2007).

Spencer, David E. “Output Gap Uncertainty and Monetary Policy in the 1970s.” Topics inMacroeconomics, vol. 4, no. 1, article 2 (February 2004).

Marron, Donald B. “Understanding the Stock Option Debate.” Joint Economic Committee ofthe U.S. Congress, Economic Policy Research, report 107-04 (July 9, 2002).

Authored Media Articles(click hyperlinks for access to article)

Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Punishing China for currency manipulation could hurtthe U.S.,” joint with Kerk L. Phillips (October 29, 2012).

VoxEU.org, “Shattering the American dream: The U.S. government’s Ponzi scheme,” joint withLaurence J. Kotlikoff and Kerk L. Phillips (May 4, 2012).

Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “2010 pension reform a plus for retirement fund solvency,”joint with Kerk L. Phillips (May 1, 2012).

Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Data show short-term lending not predatory” (December20, 2011).

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January 2016

Media Citations and Appearances(click hyperlinks for access to article, video, or audio)

NPR All Things Considered, “Sex and the Snowed-In Cities: Why this Blizzard Could Causea Baby Bump,” 3:43 minutes (January 23, 2016).

NJ.com, “Baby boom 9 months after a snow storm: Fact or fiction?” (January 23, 2016).BYU Radio, “Obama’s Middle Class Economics and Economic Inequality,” minute 7:11 to 26:08

(February 9, 2015).BYU Radio, “Turning Off the Money Spigot to the U.S. Economy,” minute 37:39 to 52:07

(November 5, 2014).State Tax Notes, “Economists Use Big Data Analytical Methods to Model Sales Tax Optimiza-

tion,” (June 16, 2014).HuffPost Live, “The Hurricane Sandy Baby Boom,” (October 29, 2013).Salt Lake Tribune, “Debt ceiling: What is it and why it’s important to Utah investors” (October

10, 2013).CNN.com, “Is the post-Sandy baby boom real?” (July 24, 2013).ABC News Radio, “Hurricane Sandy Baby Boom Hits Jersey Shore Hospitals” (July 23,2013).CBSnews.com, “Sandy babies? 9 months after superstorm, some hospitals see spike in births”

(July 23, 2013).USA TODAY, “Sandy baby boom due at Jersey Shore” (July 22, 2013).Salt Lake Tribune, “Increasing numbers of U.S. banks move from free to fee” (November 10,

2012).Slate.com, “Will Sandy bring a baby boom or baby bust? How disasters change marriage, di-

vorce, and birth rates” (November 5, 2012).RealClearMarkets.com, “Pension woe mounts as states forsake reform” (September 12, 2012).CapitalResearch.org, “Best practices for reforming state employee pensions” (August 31, 2012).Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Debt trap: breaking free from the cycle of payday loans”

(June 18, 2012).Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Dangerous debt: consumer advocate groups are urging

regulators to stop payday lending by banks” (May 21, 2012).MarginalRevolution.com, “Social Security, Savings and Stagnation” (May 4, 2012).Salt Lake Tribune, “Despite strengths, challenges lie ahead for Utah economy” (January 12,

2012).Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce Blog, “Utah’s economy is growing, education key to long-term

prosperity” (January 12, 2012).Chicago Tribune, “Oh, baby, what happened to the blizzard boom?” (November 4, 2011).Life’sLittleMysteries.com, “Baby booms & busts to follow hurricane Irene” (September 2, 2011).Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Hurricane Irene may fuel baby boom” (August 30, 2011).History.com, “Will hurricane Irene spawn a baby boom?” (August 29, 2011).Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Electronic currencies trying to be the online vehicle for

cash” (July 24, 2011).Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Economists discuss jobs outlook” (April 29, 2011).Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce Blog, “Utah Economic Council discusses warning signs, posi-

tives for economy” (April 28, 2011).KSL News Television (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Taxes going up for local businesses” (December

6, 2010).KSL News Radio (Salt Lake City, Utah), “The Utah and national unemployment outlook”

(December 3, 2010).

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January 2016

Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce Blog, “Utah Economic Council lauds Utah export perfor-mance” (September 27, 2010).

Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce Blog, “Utah Economic Council lays out next steps” (Septem-ber 23, 2010).

Medill Reports (Chicago, Illinois), “Reform of college football’s Bowl Championship Seriesstymied by financial interests” (March 10, 2010).

Yahoo! Sports Blog, “BCS economics in 60 seconds or less” (July 15, 2009).ESPN.com National Football Nation Blog, “An economic look at BCS bowls” (July 14, 2009).BYU Magazine, “How It All Came Crashing Down” (Winter 2009).Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), “Stay in school during financial ‘mess,’ college students

told” (October 17, 2008).Daily Herald (Provo, Utah), “BYU professors discuss economy” (October 16, 2008).

Professional Service and Memberships

Member: American Economic Association, Econometric Society, Society for EconomicDynamics, Society for Computational Economics, National Tax Association

Referee: Macroeconomic Dynamics, Journal of Macroeconomics, Computational Economics,Journal of Pension Economics and Finance, Economic Inquiry, Economics Letters,Fiscal Studies, Economics of Education Review, Demography

Other Skills

Fluent languages: English, Italian

Computational languages: Python, MATLAB, Mathematica, Stata

Typography: LATEX

GitHub: https://github.com/rickecon

Project Euler friend key: 65690369309368 f4ee729f0b5f0f35e36cfc5d905333ab

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January 2016

References

Laurence J. Kotlikoff Kent SmettersDepartment of Economics The Wharton SchoolBoston University University of Pennsylvania270 Bay State Road 3302 Steinberg-DietrichBoston, MA 02215 Philadelphia, PA [email protected] [email protected](617) 353-4002 (215) 898-9811

Eric Eide Kenneth L. JuddDepartment of Economics Hoover InstitutionBrigham Young University Stanford University130 Faculty Office Building Stanford, CA 94305Provo, UT 84602 [email protected]@byu.edu (650) 723-5866(801) 422-4883

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