Faculty
Department Chair
Professor Anttila-Hughes received his PhD in Sustainable Development from Columbia University. His research focuses on understanding the social impacts of environmental processes, particularly those influenced by environmental degradation and climate change.
Professor Anttila-Hughes' current research areas include: public health impacts of the climate; behavioral responses to new information about environmental risks; and determinants of the spread of environmental attitudes and ideas.
- PhD, Sustainable Development, Columbia University
Program Director
Michael Jonas is from the University of California, Davis. His concentration area of specialization is monetary economics. He completed his doctorate degree at the University of California, Davis.
- PhD, Economics, University of California, Davis
- San Francisco State University, MA, Economics
Full-Time Faculty
Alessandra Cassar is a professor of economics at the University of San Francisco. She is a member of the Executive Committee of the Economic Science Association and a former co-director of LEEPS Lab (Learning and Experimental Economics Projects of Santa Cruz) at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She received her MA in Economics from Bocconi University, Milan, in 1996, and her PhD in International Economics from the University of California, Santa Cruz, in 2001.
Cassar is passionate...
- University of California, Santa Cruz, PhD in International Economics
- Universita' Bocconi, Milano, MA in Economics
- Universita' di Parma, BA in Economics
- Behavioral and experimental economics
Dr. Chakraborty received her PhD at the University of Minnesota. Her areas of specialization include: applied macroeconomics, international macroeconomics, international finance, and development economics. Dr. Chakraborty has published research articles in the Journal of International Business Studies, Economics Letters, and the Journal of World Economic Review.
- PhD, University of Minnesota
Andrew Hobbs studies how droughts, floods, and other disasters affect people, and develops tools to reduce the impact of climate change on farmers. He focuses in particular on how the costs of climate shocks are distributed within households. He is currently working on combining machine learning and satellite data for faster and more accurate detection of disasters and on insurance to sustain women's businesses through droughts in Northern Kenya.
Before entering academia, Andrew studied...
- UC Davis, PhD in Agricultural & Resource Economics, 2020
- University of British Columbia, MA in Economics, 2010
- University of Utah, BS/BA in Economics/International Studies, 2009
Dr. Elizabeth Katz is a development economist with thirty years of experience conducting research on the intersection of gender and agricultural growth, demographic change, and public health policy and programming. In her current role as Research Director at the Global Center for Gender Equality, she works closely with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, providing technical assistance to Program Officers and grantees to strengthen the gender intentionality of the foundation’s investment...
- PhD, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Professor Khachiyan studies the populations most exposed to aggregate industrial transitions, such as climate adaptation and automation. He uses data science methods, unconventional data sources, and leading methods in causal identification to inform current policy issues within these topics. Arman teaches in both the Undergraduate and Master's Economics programs on topics including microeconomic principles, applied econometrics, and spatial economics.
Beyond academia, Arman has worked in...
- UC San Diego, PhD in Economics, 2022
- UC Berkeley, BA in Economics, 2013
Robizon Khubulashvili's research is at the intersection of theoretical, behavioral, and experimental microeconomics. A common question in his research is, how can we use a user's revealed preferences to improve the performance of online platforms? Robizon has studied this question in two settings: when monetary incentives are missing (an online gaming platform) and when monetary incentives are present (an online gambling platform). His work suggests that heterogeneity among users is an essential...
- Penn State University, PhD, 2020
- International School of Economics at TSU, MA, 2013
- Tbilisi State University, BA, 2011
Man-Lui Lau received his PhD from Cornell University. His areas of specialization are microeconomics, macroeconomics, options and futures, mathematical economics and the economies of East Asia. Dr. Lau has published papers on the theory of economic growth and Asian economies. His current research includes the East and Southeast Asian economies, financial development and economic growth, and the theory of Real Options and it's application.
- PhD, Cornell University
- Microeconomics
- Macroeconomics
- Options and futures
- Mathematical economics
- Economies of East Asia
Professor Lorentzen specializes in the economics of information, incentives, and institutions. He received his PhD in Economic Analysis and Policy from Stanford University's Graduate School of Business and previously taught at Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley. He has published research on governance and social control in China, media management, anti-corruption, environmental transparency, long-run economic growth, qualitative research methods, the creation of...
- PhD, Economic Analysis and Policy, Stanford University Graduate School of Business
Areas of research specialization are in the use of econometric, experimental, and game-theoretic tools to analyze the impact of development programs. Professor Wydick's recent work examines the impact of development programs such as microfinance, child sponsorship, and in-kind donation of children's shoes, wheelchairs for the disabled, and clean wood-burning stoves. Other recent work studies the role of hope and aspirations in escaping poverty traps. His academic publications have appeared in...
- UC Berkeley, Ph.D. Economics, 1996
- UC Davis, MS Agricultural Economics, 1988
- UC Davis, BS Agricultural Economics, 1986
- Microfinance
- Applied Econometrics
- Education and Health Interventions
- Psychology and Economics
Part-Time Faculty
Yuanyuan Deng is a lecturer at UC Berkeley, Department of Economics. She is an applied microeconomist with broad empirical interests focusing on Health Economics, Public Economics, and Labor Economics. Her research has been supported by the Michigan Retirement and Disability Research Center (MRDRC) and the Center for Retirement Research (CRR) at Boston College.
Yuanyuan received her PhD in Economics from the State University of New York-Stony Brook in 2016. Before joining UC Berkeley, she...
- Stony Brook University, PhD in Economics, 2016
- Stony Brook University, MA in Economics, 2012
Jean Driscoll has an MBA from Columbia University and a BA in economics from the University of Massachusetts. She teaches at the University of San Francisco in the College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Management. She currently teaches undergraduate macroeconomics and microeconomics in the Department of Economics, and has taught intermediate economics in the School of Management, as well as budgeting/finance and policy analysis in the Master of Public Administration program. Earlier...
- Columbia University, MBA, 1982
- University of Massachusetts, BA in Economics, 1977
- Macroeconomics
- Public management
Sandhya Patlolla has a PhD from University of California, Davis. Her research specialization is in the areas of economic development, agricultural economics, supply chain management, and lately, health economics. Dr. Patlolla’s current projects focus on measuring the impact of agricultural income support programs in India and evaluating the economic viability of breakthrough health care products.
- PhD, Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California at Davis
- MS, Agricultural Economics, Kansas State University
Konrad Edward Ian Posch studies comparative political economy and regulatory politics with a particular focus on the politics of technology and regulation & governance (REGGOV). His dissertation examined the variety of ways regulators, innovators, and entrepreneurs co-create disruptive technological innovation in advanced industrial democracies. With a background in physics and mathematics, he also studies the deeper insights we can gain from qualitative and multi-method research and the...
- University of California, Berkeley, PhD in Political Science, 2023
- University of California, Berkeley, MA in Political Science, 2014
- University of Chicago, MA in Social Sciences, 2011
- University...
Samual Riewe holds a Master's in Economics from San Francisco State University and teaches introductory macroeconomics and microeconomics at USF. His research focuses on consumer behavior in the wine industry, where he has led statistical studies. Outside of academia, he enjoys tennis, golf, and splitboarding.
- San Francisco State University, MA in Economics, 2012
- Sonoma State University, BA in Economics, 2010
- Applied microeconomics
- Econometrics
- Federal Reserve policy
Timothy Tung was born and raised in Los Alamos, New Mexico. His interest in working with and fostering first-generation students stems from multiple personal and professional experiences. These experiences include teaching for Upward Bound and SEO Scholars and writing curriculum focused on supporting first-generation students.
At the University of San Francisco, Timothy joined the following Faculty Learning Community: “Supporting First-Generation College Students in Classrooms, Across Schools...
- University of San Francisco, MA in Economics, 2013
- University of California, Santa Cruz, BA in Business Management Economics, 2010
- Principles of Microeconomics/Macroeconomics
- Mathematics (Algebra - Calculus)
- First-Generation Student Curriculum Development & Implementation
Kyle Woodward is a microeconomist specializing in game theory, auctions, and incentive design. He received his Ph.D. from UCLA in 2015, and has previously taught courses on market design and strategic behavior at both UCLA and the University of North Carolina. In addition to maintaining an active research agenda, most recently taking microeconomic theory to topics in sustainability, he is currently employed at Gopuff as an expert on causal analysis and platform marketplace optimization.
- UCLA, PhD in Economics, 2015
- UCLA, MA in Economics, 2011
- Stanford University, BS in Mathematics, 2006
- Economics
- Causal modeling
- Counterfactual policy analysis
- Data science
Faculty Emeritus
Hartmut Fischer received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Fischer has a number of areas of specialization: international trade, international finance and development economics. He has served as a consultant to the World Bank and the European Union. Research interests include economic problems faced by countries in transition from socialist market economies, country risk analysis, issues of governance, the process of convergence vs. divergence between poor and rich...
Prof. Lehmann obtained his PhD from Cornell University and taught at the University of San Francisco in traditional and on-line venues. He is the author of The Irwin Guide To Using The Wall Street Journal, which sold 250,000 copies in seven editions. Prof. Lehmann also developed a popular seminar, Be Your Own Economist ®, on business and investment conditions, that he offers to investors, corporations and professional groups. The San Francisco media frequently interview Prof. Lehmann on current...
Charles N'cho-Oguie (N'cho) is Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of San Francisco (USF), where he taught macroeconomics, econometrics, and development macroeconomics for nearly two decades (1986–2005). Upon early retirement, Professor N'cho devoted the majority of his time to development work, especially in Africa. He has also spent more than 20 years working as a senior international consultant for the World Bank, the African Development Bank (AfDB), and the United Nations...
- PhD, Applied Economics, Stanford University
- MS, Operational Research, Stanford University
- MS, Statistics, Data Analysis and Statistical Computing, Stanford University
- DEA, Economics, University...
John Veitch, Professor of Finance, and Director of the M.S. in Financial Analysis program, is an esteemed faculty member with over two decades of academic and chief administrative service to the university. Specializing in financial analysis and risk management, Dr. Veitch is the co-author of a number of articles on country risk in Mexico, Brazil, Argentina and South Africa due to contributing factors of financial integration, currency devaluation and currency contagion. Professor Veitch served...
- C.F.A. (Chartered Financial Analyst) designation, 1999
- Ph.D., Economics, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 1985
- Degree: B.A., Economics and Mathematics, Trinity College, University of...