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Why Econ?

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Economics seeks to understand choices and their consequences. Why save rather than spend? Why put certain products on sale and charge top dollar for another? Why purchase instead of rent? Researchers and students at the 好色App Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR) choose to examine the world and make an impact through the prism of economics. In this ongoing series, we鈥檝e asked them one question: Why econ?

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  • Michael Droste, Postdoctoral Fellow

    鈥淯sing the economics toolkit to make sense of the world just clicked with me,鈥 says Michael Droste, who had thought he would study law.
  • Isaac Sorkin, Senior Fellow

    Isaac Sorkin had zero training in economics when he decided at the end of high school that the field was right for him. For a lot of reasons: He likes a good challenge, and he saw early on that economics is fundamentally 鈥渢he language of public policy."
  • Maria Polyakova, Senior Fellow

    As an undergrad in the mid-2000s, Maria Polyakova 鈥 who was then considering a career in cognitive science 鈥 realized that economics provides a lens through which she could better understand structural issues in society.
  • Adrien Auclert, Senior Fellow

    Meetings with policymakers, online or off, happen with some frequency these days for Adrien Auclert, who once toyed with a career as a policymaker but chose academia instead.
  • Annamaria Lusardi, Senior Fellow

    When Annamaria Lusardi greets students on the first day of her class on personal finance, she sets the record straight: She isn鈥檛 teaching them just how to save or invest.
  • Emma Hou, '24

    Emma Hou stumbled onto economics by chance. As a high school junior visiting her brother at 好色App, she dropped into an introductory economics course. That first step led to a much longer journey.
  • Kwabena Donkor, Faculty Fellow

    For Kwabena Donkor, driving a New York City taxi while studying economics in college was grueling. He鈥檇 wake up before 3 a.m. on Sundays to stand in line to lease a cab, then work a 24-hour shift straight.
  • Olivia Martin, PhD and JD student

    On the first day of class for an economics seminar on measuring government performance through data, a presentation slide described the course using the plural, 鈥済overnments.鈥
  • Arjun Ramani, BA '21, MS '22

    In 2005, when Shaquille O鈥橬eal was in the NBA limelight, a young Arjun Ramani would bring in box scores for his first-grade show-and-tell to demonstrate how another Miami Heat player, up-and-comer Dwyane Wade, was also worthy of fandom.
  • Marshall Burke, Senior Fellow

    It takes a particular kind of economist to boast expertise 鈥渋n doing nothing鈥 鈥 and to land on late-night TV because of it.
  • Levi Boxell, PhD '22

    Levi Boxell grew up wanting to be an engineer or a computer scientist. But his career path took a turn toward economics during his senior year in high school when perspectives of poverty and the role of economics research began to swirl together.
  • David Chan, Senior Fellow

    Being a doctor and caring for patients, one-by-one, is a rewarding career. But what if your profession can improve the lives of many people, all at once?
  • Bessie Zhang, '23

    Bessie Zhang鈥檚 eyes light up when she talks about currency swaps and financial instruments.
  • Valerie Scimeca, '20

    Valerie Scimeca鈥檚 first lesson about an economy came in the third grade.
  • Nina Buchmann, PhD '24

    Nina Buchmann鈥檚 interest in global economic inequality and its relationship to gender took root early.
  • Petra Persson, Faculty Fellow

    A lot in life ties to family.
  • Aava Farhadi '23

    When Aava Farhadi took AP microeconomics in high school, it was, admittedly, not love at first sight. At the time, her sights were stuck on pre-med.