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Managerial Economics & Decision Sciences

James J. O'Connor Professor of Managerial Economics & Decision Sciences

(Center) Co-Director, Global Poverty Research Lab (GPRL)

Portrait of Nancy Qian, Faculty at the Kellogg School of Management

Nancy Qian is the James J. O’Connor Professor of Economics in the MEDS Department at the Kellogg School of Management. She earned her Ph.D. from MIT and was a Harvard Academy postdoctoral fellow at Harvard’s Weatherhead Center, after serving as Associate Professor of Economics at Yale University. She is the current President of the American Comparative Economics Association. 

Her research provides rigorous empirical evidence on the fundamental drivers of economic development, including geography, demography, human capital, institutions, and culture. Using theory-driven questions and innovative strategies with large modern and historical datasets, she examines development across global contexts. She is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, an Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, and has received grants from the National Science Foundation and the Russell Sage Foundation. She is among the most highly cited economists of her generation.

At Northwestern, she teaches across MBA, EMBA (receiving the Best Core Teacher award), Executive Education, and Ph.D. programs. She co-directs the Global Poverty Research Lab, where she founded the China Cluster, and also founded the independent China Econ Lab to advance high-quality analysis of the Chinese economy. 

Her work has been featured in NPR, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, and the BBC. She regularly advises policymakers and business leaders on geopolitical risk and the global economy, particularly China, and is writing her first book under contract with the University of Chicago Press.

 

About Nancy
Research interests
  • Development Economics
  • Political Economy
  • Historical Development
Teaching interests
  • Economic Development
  • Political Economy
  • Economies of the Population
  • Development Economics
  • Empirical Methods
  • Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Population
  • Doctor of Philosophy, 2005, Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Bachelor of Arts, 2001, Economics, Government, Japanese and Mathematics, University of Texas at Austin, High Honors
  • Associate Professor, Economics, Yale University, 2013-present
    Visiting Scholar, Economics, Stern School of Business, New York University, 2016-present
    Visiting Scholar, Economics, Booth Business School, University of Chicago, 2015-present
    Visiting Scholar, Economics, Stern School of Business, New York University, 2014-present
    Affiliate, Council on East Asian Studies, Yale University, 2014-present
    Affiliate, Leitner Center for Political Economy, Yale University, 2014-present
    Assistant Professor, Economics, Yale University, 2009-2013
    Visiting Scholar, Industrial Relations Section, Princeton University, 2011-2012
    Visiting Scholar, Booth Business School, University of Chicago, 2009-present
    Visiting Scholar, Economics, Harvard University, 2007-2009
    Harvard Academy Scholar, Harvard University, 2007-2009
    Assistant Professor, Economics, Brown University, 2005
    Affiliate, Populations Studies and Training Center, Brown University, 2005-2009
  • Association of Comparative Economics Studies, President
    Asian Economic Development Conference, Keynote
    ), Central Univ. of Finance and Economics -- Chinese Economists Society Forum
    RFBerlin Migration Forum Keynote
    Econometrics Society North America Keynote
    Council of Foreign Relations
    Northwestern Kellogg Best EMBA Core Course Teacher Award
    Northwestern Kellogg Best EMBA Core Course Teacher Award
    The Conquest Award for Contributions to Holodomor Studies
    The Review of Economic Studies Excellence in Refereeing Award
    Fellow of the Econometric Society
    U.S. Chamber of Commerce Annual China Conference
    Kiel-Göttingen-CEPR Conference “China in the Global Economy” Keynote
    Midwest Development Economic Conference Keynote
    Modena University Conference on Development and Political Economy Keynote
    Kiel-Göttingen-CEPR Conference “China in the Global Economy” Keynote
    University of Torino VPDE Keynote
    University of Muenster Conference on “The Political Economy of Democracy and Dictatorship” Keynote
    Carlo Alberto Workshop in Economic Development Keynote
    Italian Society of Development Economics Keynote, Italian Society of Development Economics
    Asian Economic Development Conference (Peking University), Keynote, Asian Development Bank
    Chinese Economists Society Forum Keynote
    CEPR Kiel Institute Conference on Geopolitics and Economics Keynote
    Columbia University NT Wang Lecture
    Fellow of the Econometric Society, Econometrics Society
    Keynote: IEB SOLE Summer Workshop on Political Economy
    Keynote: University of Lund Anne Rude Workshop on Culture, Institutions and Development
    Keynote: University of Chicago and BFI Economic History and Historical Political Economy of Russia
    Keynote: University of International Business and Economics for The Third Beijing Interna-tional Trade and Investment Symposium: Trade Institutions and Development
    Keynote: Shanghai Lixin University of Accounting and Finance
    Keynote: Peking University CCER Summer Institute
  • Associate Editor, Economica, 2015
    Associate Editor, The Journal of European Economics, 2013
    Associate Editor, The Journal of Development Economics, 2010
    Editorial Board, Review of International Organizations, 2017
    Editorial Board, American Economic Journal – Applied, 2017
    Editorial Board, VOX China, 2017

Political Economy IV: Topics in Development Economics (MECS-540-4)

This course introduces PhD students to three important topics within development economics and political economy, reviewing the frontier of the literature, the latest questions, methods most prevalently used, and the evidence thus far. The class focuses on empirical methods and their connection with theory. The course goal is assisting students as they transition into the research phase of their career.