Professor Daniel Bernhofen

M.S. (Syracuse) Diplom (Ulm, West Germany) Ph.D. (Syracuse)

Leverhulme Professor of International Economics

School of Economics
Room B7, The Sir Clive Granger Building
University of Nottingham
University Park
Nottingham NG7 2RD
United Kingdom

Telephone: +44 (0)115 84 67055
Fax: +44 (0)115 951 4159
e-mail: daniel.bernhofen@nottingham.ac.uk

Personal web site:


Profile

Daniel Bernhofen joined the University of Nottingham in 2005. Prior to moving to Nottingham he taught at Clark University in Massachusetts, where he is still holding a research professorship. He also taught at Brandeis University, Tufts University and the University of Ulm. Daniel's research interests are in international trade, international industrial organization and applied microeconomics. He has published in American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy and the Journal of International Economics. His current research on the 'natural experiment of Japan' is funded by the US National Science Foundation.


Selected publications and discussion papers

  1. “Multiple cones, factor price differences and the factor content of trade”, forthcoming in Journal of International Economics (web link).

  2. Empirical International Trade, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, forthcoming .

  3. “Predicting the pattern of international trade in the neoclassical model: a synthesis”, 2009, Economic Theory 41:5-21 (web link).

  4. “Making sense of the comparative advantage gains from trade: Comment on Batra”, 2006, Review of International Economics 14(3): 517-519.

  5. “An empirical assessment of the comparative advantage gains from trade: evidence from Japan” (with J. Brown), 2005, American Economic Review 95(1), 208-225.

  6. “Gottfried Haberler's 1930 reformulation of comparative advantage in retrospect”, 2005, Review of International Economics 13(5): 997-1000.

  7. “The empirics of comparative advantage: overcoming the tyranny of nonrefutability”, 2005, Review of International Economics 13(5): 1017-1023.

  8. “A direct test of the theory of comparative advantage: the case of Japan” (with J. Brown), 2004, Journal of Political Economy 112(1), 48-67.

Other discussion papers can be downloaded from here.


Teaching

A complete list of modules can be found here.


Curriculum Vitae

Download as a file.


This page last updated on 14/09/09 by Charlene Hill

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