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 Brief Bio
Peter
Murrell, Professor at the
University
of Maryland and Chair of the Economics Department. He received his
B.Sc.(Econ.) and M.Sc.(Econ.) from the London School of Economics and his
Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. His current research interests
include privatization, institutional reform in transition, the interaction
between firms and institutions, survey methods, professions, and
self-regulation. He is currently on or has been on the editorial boards of
the Journal of Economic Perspectives, Journal of Comparative
Economics, Economic Systems, Economics of Planning,
International Economics and Economic Policy,
the Eastern Economic Journal, and Comparative Economic
Studies. He is a Research Fellow of the Davidson Institute of the
University of Michigan. Since 1991, he has worked on a variety of programs
with the IRIS Center including participation in economic education, policy
reform, and legal reform projects in
Russia,
Mongolia, and Romania. He has also been a consultant for the World Bank,
UNCTAD, UNDP, the MacArthur Foundation, PlanEcon, and the European Union.
Recent publications include: "Competition and Privatization Amidst Weak
Institutions: Evidence from Mongolia," (with James Anderson and Young Lee)
Economic Inquiry, 2000, Assessing the Value of Law in Transition
Economies, University of Michigan Press: Ann Arbor, 2001, The
Institutional Economics of Foreign Aid: A Principal-Agent Approach,
(with Bertin Martens, Uwe Mummert, and Paul Seabright), Cambridge, 2002,
"Enterprise Restructuring in Transition: A Quantitative Survey," (with
Simeon Djankov) Journal of Economic Literature, September 2002, and
"Institutions and Firms in Transition Economies," in the Handbook of
New Institutional Economics. |
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