Kyle Bagwell

American economics professor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kyle Bagwell (born February 15, 1961) is an American economics professor. He is known for contributions to industrial organization and international trade.

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Kyle Bagwell
Born (1961-02-15) February 15, 1961 (age 65)
Academic background
Alma materStanford University
Southern Methodist University
Doctoral advisorMichael H. Riordan
Academic work
DisciplineIndustrial Organization
International Trade
InstitutionsStanford University
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Education

Bagwell received a B.S. in economics and a B.A. in mathematics, both from Southern Methodist University, in 1983; and a Ph.D. in economics from Stanford University, in 1986, working under the supervision of Michael H. Riordan.

Academic career

Bagwell is the Donald L. Lucas Endowed Professor in Economics at Stanford University.[1] He held previous academic appointments at Columbia University and Northwestern University.

Honors

Bagwell was elected Fellow for the Econometric Society in 2005.[2]

Research contributions and publications

Bagwell has published over 50 papers in specialized economics journals, on topics including trade agreements; competition and cooperation under private information; collusion; advertising and pricing with asymmetric information.[3] Several of these have been widely cited and reprinted in various scholarly collections. Together with Robert Staiger, he is also the author of The Economics of the World Trading System (MIT Press, 2002).[4]

Professional and public service

Bagwell served as Editor of the RAND Journal of Economics from 1996 to 2002.

References

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