
Amit Khandelwal
Dong-Soo Hahn Professor of Global Affairs and Economics at Yale University
Amit Khandelwal is Dong-Soo Hahn Professor of Global Affairs and Economics at Yale University. He holds affiliations at the National Bureau of Economic Research and Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab. He was previously the Jerome Chazen Professor of Global Business and Chair of the Economics Division at Columbia Business School. From 2011-16, he was an Editor of The Review of Economics and Statistics.
Recent work by Amit Khandelwal
-
How can emerging economies break free from the sidelines of global trade?
The second episode of Development Dialogues covers how developing countries have engaged with global trade. How have their approaches to trade differed based on their underlying institutional and economic structure? What has been the impact on their economies and how might Trump's presidency shape the future of global trade?
Published 17.12.24
-
Language barriers in multinational companies: Evidence from Myanmar
English language courses for domestic managers improve their interactions with foreign managers, and potential employers value these interactions
Published 17.06.22
-
Trade in developing economies
Why do trade barriers remain high in developing countries despite the significant potential to drive economic growth through trade?
Published 29.07.20
-
The return to protectionism
The aggregate annual loss to US consumers from higher import prices as a result of the trade war with China could be as much as $68.8 billion
Published 02.12.19
-
Satellite imagery: The future of tracking urban markets
Analysing night-light intensity provides a complementary, alternative analysis of the intensity of economic activity in areas around urban markets
Published 29.10.18
-
Incentivising technology adoption in Pakistani firms
For technology adoption to be successful, employees need to expect to share in the gains
Published 06.11.17
-
Import competition and the quality of domestic goods
Lower tariffs promote quality upgrading of products close to the world quality frontier, but discourage quality upgrading for those far away from it
Published 12.07.17