MissionFacilitiesDonate to EconomicsResearch AreasJob PostingsContact Us
FacultyVisitorsEmeriti FacultyAdjunct FacultyAdvisorsStaffGraduate StudentsGraduate Student Job Market CandidatesAdvisory Board
This Week's Seminars and WorkshopsApplied Economics SeminarEconometrics SeminarEconomic Theory SeminarMacroeconomics SeminarEconomic Theory Reading GroupEconomic Theory Brown BagDevelopment LunchGraduate Student EC950 WorkshopGraduate Student DefensesDunaway Lecture Series
WelcomePhD ProgramProgram StructureFunding InformationApplication InformationFrequently Asked QuestionsPast Job Market PlacementsCurrent Job Market CandidatesForms and Check Sheets
Might Econ Be for You?Program InformationForms and Check SheetsAdvising ResourcesHelp Room ScheduleEcon ScholarsGet InvolvedSummer Online Course InformationAwardsScholarshipsFAQNewsletters
 

Steve Matusz

Professor
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania

Address: 220B Marshall-Adams Hall
Tel: 517.353.8719
Fax: 517.432.1068
E-mail: matusz@msu.edu

Curriculum Vitae


  • Labor market effects of international trade
  • Labor market adjustment to trade liberalization
  • The consequences of different labor market institutions for international trade
  • "Global Engagement, Complex Tasks, and the Distribution of Occupational Employment" (with C. Davidson, F. Heyman, F. Sjoholm, and S. Zhu), Review of International Economics, September 2016: 717 - 736.
  • "Globalization and Imperfect Labor Market Sorting" (with C. Davidson, F. Heyman, F. Sjoholm, and S. Zhu), Journal of International Economics, November 2014: 177 - 194.
  • "Globalization and the Market for High-Ability Managers" (with C. Davidson), International Journal of Economic Theory, March 2014: 107 - 124.
  • International Trade With Equilibrium Unemployment (with Carl Davidson), Princeton University Press, 2010.
  • Globalization and Firm Level Adjustment with Imperfect Labor Markets, (with C. Davidson and A. Shevchenko) Journal of International Economics, July 2008: 295-309.

 
Michigan State University Department of Economics