ROBERT C. MARSHALL, Head of the
Department
613 Kern Building
814-865-1456
econgrad@psu.edu
Degrees Conferred: Ph.D., M.A.
The Graduate Faculty
Sophie Bade, Ph.D. (New York University) Assistant Professor of Economics
Herman J. Bierens, Ph.D. (Amsterdam) Professor of Economics
Kalyan Chatterjee, D.B.A. (Harvard) Distinguished Professor of Management Science and Economics
N. Edward Coulson, Ph.D. (California, San Diego) Professor of Economics
Emmanouil Galenianos (Manolis), Ph.D. (Pennsylvania) Assistant Professor of Economics
Edward J. Green, Ph.D. (Carnegie Mellon) Professor of Economics
Barry Ickes, Ph.D. (California, Berkeley) Professor of Economics
James S. Jordan, Ph.D. (Northwestern) Professor of Economics
Sung Jae Jun, Ph.D. (Brown) Assistant Professor of Economics
Thomas A. Knapp, Ph.D. (Colorado, Boulder) Associate Professor of Economics
Kala Krishna, Ph.D. (Princeton) Professor of Economics
Vijay Krishna, Ph.D. (Princeton) Professor of Economics
Derek Laing, Ph.D. (Essex) Associate Professor of Economics
Jenny Li, Ph.D. (Cornell) Associate Professor of Economics and Mathematics
Raymond E. Lombra, Ph.D. (Penn State) Professor of Economics
Robert C. Marshall, Ph.D. (California, San Diego) Professor of Economics
Rajen Mookerjee, Ph.D. (Northwestern) Associate Professor of Economics
Coenraad A. Pinkse (Joris), Ph.D. (London School of Economics) Associate Professor of Economics
Marek Pycia, Ph.D. (MIT) Assistant Professor of Economics
John Riew, Ph.D. (Wisconsin) Professor Emeritus of Economics
Bee-Yan Roberts, Ph.D. (Wisconsin) Professor of Economics
Mark J. Roberts, Ph.D. (Wisconsin) Professor of Economics
David Shapiro, Ph.D. (Princeton) Professor of Economics
James Tybout, Ph.D. (Wisconsin) Professor of Economics
Gustavo Ventura, Ph.D. (Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) Assistant Professor of Economics
Neil Wallace, Ph.D. (Chicago) Professor of Economics
Ruilin Zhou, Ph.D. (Pittsburgh) Associate Professor of Economics
NOTE: For details regarding admission, degree requirements, and financial aid, see Graduate Program on the departments home page. Click on Program Home Page, above.
Graduate courses carry numbers from 500 to 599 and 800 to 899. Advanced undergraduate courses numbered between 400 and 499 may be used to meet some graduate degree requirements when taken by graduate students. Courses below the 400 level may not. A graduate student may register for or audit these courses in order to make up deficiencies or to fill in gaps in previous education but not to meet requirements for an advanced degree.
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The Pennsylvania State University
© 2004
The University reserves the right to change the requirements and regulations listed here and to determine whether a student has satisfactorily met its requirements for admission or graduation, and to reject any applicant for any reason the University determines to be material to the applicant's qualifications to pursue higher education. Nothing in this material should be considered a guarantee that completion of a program and graduation from the University will result in employment.
This electronic Graduate Bulletin is a version of the official bulletin of The Pennsylvania State University. It is suggested that users refer to this electronic bulletin when seeking the latest information about the University's academic programs and courses. Printed versions of the Bulletin are also official copies of the programs, courses, and policies in effect at the time of printing.
DATE LAST REVIEWED BY GRADUATE SCHOOL: 5/25/04
DATE LAST REVIEWED BY PUBLICATIONS: 10/27/06