Announcements for Friday, April 12, 2013

News

  • Three Department of Economics seniors receive Wallace E. Barron award

    Three of the five seniors awarded the prestigious Wallace E. Barron University Senior Award for 2013 have majors from the Department of Economics.

    Those awardees include Moses Bomet, Urbandale, Iowa, who majored in economics; Szuyin Leow, Apple Valley, Minnesota, who majored in economics and Bethany Olson, Jewell, Iowa, who majored in agricultural business. Learn more about each by clicking on their names. Find the full list of awardees at: www.isualum.org/index.cfm?nodeID=7916&audienceID=1

    The Iowa State University Alumni Association established this award in 1968 to recognize outstanding seniors who display high character, outstanding achievement in academics and university/community activities, and promise for continuing these exemplary qualities as alumni. The award is named for Wallace E. "Red" Barron (Class of '28), who served as director of alumni affairs at Iowa State from 1937 to 1968. Awardees receive recognition and the Official Iowa State University Ring, compliments of the ISU Alumni Association. Two to five awards are granted annually.


    Moses Bomet          

    Szuyin Leow          

    Bethany Olson

     

     

  • Friday's William Murray Memorial Seminar: John Crespi, Kansas State University

    "Do Food Labels Scare You? What Your Brain Shows," with John Crespi, Kansas State University, Friday, April 19, 3:40 PM-5 PM, 368A Heady Hall.

    John Crespi’s research focuses on industrial organization and product differentiation issues in food and agriculture. His interests include product quality differences that affect commodity promotion, food safety regulations, food labeling, and the competitive structure of markets. He has worked as a consultant for several commodity boards performing studies to measure the effectiveness of industry-financed generic advertising. Crespi teaches courses in agribusiness marketing and research methods, as well as a team-taught course in quantitative methods.He received an M.A. in Economics, from Colorado State University, Fort Collins, 1994, and a Ph.D. in Agricultural & Resource Economics, from the University of California, Davis, 2000.

    Abstract: This seminar will present an overview of a neuroeconomic study funded by USDA examining human brain responses to controversial food technologies. To date, the research is the largest functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study on human response to food labels that signal the use of cloning, growth hormone, and "free range" production technologies. With several experiments underway, the seminar will be aimed at primarily at economists who wish to know more about the use of state-of-the-art neuroimaging methods in economics, how fMRI works, what fMRI can reveal and what it cannot, the types of analyses undertaken and emerging results, as well as pitfalls to this type of research. There is no paper, but the speaker will discuss methods and initial results of several ongoing experiments.

    William G. Murray (1903-1991) was an agricultural economist, founder of Living History Farms, and an Iowa gubernatorial candidate. Murray received a BA from Coe College in 1924, and MA from Harvard University in 1925, and a PhD from the University of Minnesota in 1932. He came to Iowa State University in 1927, with teaching and research interests in farm land valuation and finance. Murray served as head of the Department of Economics and Sociology at ISU from 1943 to 1955. In 1935-1936, he was chief economist with the Farm Credit Administration, and in 1948 he served as president of the Agricultural & Applied Economics Association. He played a prominent role in the creation and early history of Living History Farms in Urbandale, Iowa, and in 1967, he helped organize the LHF Foundation. He served as research director of LHF from 1967-1974, and as its president from 1974-1981. Murray was also involved in Iowa politics, and was Iowa's Republican gubernatorial candidate in 1958 and 1966.

  • Weekly Media Contacts for the Department of Economics

    Dave Swenson spoke with Jennifer Jacobs, Des Moines Register, regarding President Obama's budget proposal. He also spoke with Joe Gardyasz, Des Moines Business Record, regarding the programmatic and economic success of the Iowa Power Fund, based on Swenson's critical review of their final impact report.

Conferences and Calls for Papers

Papers and Presentations

  • Recent presentations by Keri Jacobs

    Jacobs presented at the Midwest Aronia Association’s conference in Des Moines on April 5. The MAA is considering the formation of a cooperative to market the aronia berry, and wanted Jacobs to speak about cooperatives principles and the economics of cooperatives.

    Jacobs also gave a a seminar in the Department of Agricultural Economics at the University of Nebraska (Lincoln) on April 12