Michael Coelli

Australian economist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Michael "Mick" Coelli is an Australian academic and labour economist. He is currently a professor of economics at the University of Melbourne.[1]

He appears in the Australian media on the topic of economics and has been published in The Conversation, The Melbourne Institute, and The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute.[2][3]

His research papers mainly focus on the Australian labour market, education economics, and gender earnings gaps.[4][5]

Career

Coelli completed a Bachelor of Commerce with honours in economics from the University of New South Wales, and a Master of Arts and PhD in economics from the University of British Columbia.[1][6]

He is currently associate professor of economics at the University of Melbourne.[1]

Publications

  • Borland, J. & Coelli, M. (2022). The Australian labour market and the digital economy. Economic implications of the digital economy, Sydney, pp. 63-.[7]
  • Borland, J. & Coelli, M. (2021). Is It 'Dog Days' for the Young in the Australian Labour Market? AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 54(4), pp. 421–444. doi:10.1111/1467-8462.12431[8]
  • Coelli, M., Borland, J. (2019) Behind the Headline Number: Why not to Rely on Frey and Osborne's Predictions of Potential Job Loss from Automation. SSRN Electronic Journal.[9]

References

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