Announcements for Friday, February 24, 2012
News
- Economics faculty and staff honored at spring convocation
Four Department of Economics faculty and staff members were presented awards at the annual spring convocation of the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences at ISU.
Ron Deiter and William Edwards, both professors in economics, received the Outstanding Service in Student Recruitment and Retention Award. Under their joint guidance the Agricultural Business Club has won the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association’s Outstanding Club Award for the past six years. Their guidance has increased student recruitment and retention within the agricultural business major.
Ebby Luvaga, a lecturer in economics, received the Learning Community Coordinator Award. Luvaga has established a welcoming environment for freshmen into the agricultural business learning community. Since 2001, she has increased participation while sustaining the quality of the learning community.
Jacinto Fabiosa, a scientist with the Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, received the Professional and Scientific Research Award. Fabiosa is a scientist and co-director of the Iowa State University Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute (FAPRI). He is a leading expert in emerging issues and both industry and policymaking representative seek his expertise. As a member of the FAPRI team he also developed cutting edge methodologies in the analysis of proposed agricultural policies for several farm bills. - Hoffman to exit as provost
Executive vice president and provost Elizabeth Hoffman announced this week that she will resign her position by the end of the calendar year. In an email to faculty and staff, she wrote that because she has been exploring other opportunities, she advised president Steven Leath to begin a search for her successor. Learn more at: http://www.inside.iastate.edu/archive/article/2012/02/23/hoffman - Monday's Bob R. Holdren Memorial Lecture with Erin Krupka, University of Michigan
The Bob R. Holdren Memorial Lecture with Erin Krupka, University of Michigan, will take place on Monday, February 27 at 4:10 PM in room 368A Heady Hall. Krupka will speak on her research entitled, "A meeting of the minds: contracts and social norms."
Erin Krupka is an assistant professor at the School of Information. She is an experimental behavioral economist who explores the ways in which social incentives and environmental factors influence behavior, using both laboratory and field experiments. Before joining the School of Information as an assistant professor at the University of Michigan in 2009, Dr. Krupka graduated from Carnegie Mellon University and joined IZA (a Labor Economics Research Institute) in Bonn, Germany, as a post doc.
Though firmly grounded in economics, one of the hallmarks of her research agenda is the synthesis of theory and findings stemming from social science multiple disciplines. Her research on social norms suggests why individuals might engage in behaviors that appear inconsistent with self-interest and suggests why trivial modifications to a decision context can change behavior significantly. In addition, she has developed a new protocol for measuring and identifying social norms that researchers and practitioners can use to answer important questions regarding the emergence, maintenance, content and transmission of social norms. Broadly, her work contributes to the emerging literature that models the sway of non-wealth factors on choice, by using social norms to raise the “psychological cost” of selfishness. This work is directly relevant to the incentive-centered design of information systems, an approach pioneered by faculty at the School of Information.
Bob R. Holdren was born September 13, 1922, in Pendleton, Indiana. He received his BA degree in 1948 and his M.A. degree in 1948 from Indiana University. In 1959 he received his PhD from Yale University. His PhD dissertation on "The Structure of a Retail Market and the Market Behavior of Retail Units" won an award from the Ford Foundation as an outstanding dissertation on the problems of business. Holdren joined the Iowa State University staff in 1958. He served as a visiting professor at Indiana University in 1961, received a Ford Foundation Faculty Fellowship for 1966-1967, and was a consultant and expert witness for the Federal Trade Commission from 1973 to 1978. With a commitment to good teaching, Professor Holdren displayed a genuine interest in both undergraduate and graduate students. - EGSA takes in gymnastics tournament
Enjoy a photo of EGSA members at a recent outing to Hilton Coliseum to see a gymnastics meet between ISU and Southeast Missouri State! - Weekly media connections for the Department of Economics
Mike Duffy spoke with Leslie Reid, Omaha World Herald, on a recent land auction in Nebraska. Additional contacts for Duffy:
- Tom Ryder, WNEX radio, on land values
William Edwards and Mike Duffy spoke with Tim Hoskins, Iowa Farmer Today, regarding recent land rent auctions.Chad Hart spoke with Fran Howard, AgWeb.com, on projections for the South American corn and soybean crops for the coming year. Additional contacts for Hart:
- Scott Kilman, Wall Street Journal, on U.S. China agricultural trade.
- Andrea Johnson, MN Farm and Ranch Guide, on recent corn and soybean price swings.
- Chet Hollingshead, AgriBusiness Report, on the supply/demand projections from USDA to be released tomorrow at the USDA Ag Outlook Forum.
- Harvest Public Media regarding beef prices and the factors affecting them.
- John Pocock, Corn and Soybean Digest, on cash rents and crop selections.
- Dirck Steimel, Iowa Farm Bureau Spokesman, on crop exports and the factors that influence them.
- Ed Clark, Farm Journal, on the growth in world agricultural output and the challenges U.S. farmers will face as other areas of the world increase production.
- Andre Stephenson, Successful Farming, on corn planting dates.
Hongli Hennessy spoke with Jens Manuel Krogstad of the Des Moines Register, regarding the recent increase in Chinese students to Iowa State University.
Dave Swenson was interviewed by Dirck Steimel, Farm Bureau Spokesman, on Iowa's road funding stalemate and the importance of infrastructure for economic growth. He was also contacted by Ron Nixon, a reporter with The New York Times, who requested his Leopold study on local food production potential in the Midwest. He asked Swenson whether local foods could play a significant part in the First Lady's healthy choices initiative.
Graduate Student Announcements
- 2012 UChicago Summer School on Socioeconomic Inequality
We are delighted to announce the 1st Annual Summer School on Socioeconomic Inequality (SSSI 2012), to be hosted by the University of Chicago from July 9-15 under the direction of Steven N. Durlauf and James J. Heckman.
SSSI 2012 is supported by the Institute for New Economic Thinking Global Working Group on Human Capital and Economic Opportunity
(http://mfi.uchicago.edu/humcap/hc.shtml) and the Becker-Friedman Institute (http://mfi.uchicago.edu).
The summer school is open to PhD candidates from around the world. There is no cost to participation, and room and board will be provided to participants. Students are expected to meet their individual transportation costs. The admitted class will be restricted to 25-30 students. Applications may be submitted at the summer school website:
https://ineqss.uchicago.edu/ and are due April 15, 2012.
Please direct any questions to Jennifer Pachon (jennifer.b.pachon@gmail.com) or Steven Durlauf (sdurlauf@ssc.wisc.edu).
Conferences and Calls for Papers
- 2nd Annual International Conference on MME: Call for Papers
More information available at: http://mm-economics.org


