Professor Emeritus of Economics and Public Policy
[email protected]
Office Information:
735 S. State Street
3314 Weill Hall
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-3091
phone: 734-764-6817
Tenure-track;
International Economics;
Economics
Education/Degree:
Ph.D., Cornell University, 1971
About
Professor Deardorff is primarily interested in the economics of international trade, both theory and policy. He has contributed to the pure theory of international trade, adapting and extending traditional neoclassical models of international trade and specialization. On trade policy, Deardorff has written widely on the uses of trade policies and the rules restricting these uses. Also, with Professor Robert Stern of University of Michigan and Professor Drusilla Brown of Tufts University, he contributed to the development and use of computable general equilibrium models of international trade policy. His recent and current topics of theoretical research include the role of trade costs in determining patterns of trade, the determinants of international specialization, and the mechanisms by which trade liberalization may stimulate industrialization and growth. On trade policy, Deardorff has worked with his colleagues on the effects of both multilateral and regional trade agreements, and he has explored theoretically various problematic features of free trade agreements.
Affiliation(s)
- Professor Emeritus of Public Policy, Ford School of Public Policy
Research Area(s)
- International Trade Theory and Policy