Bruce T. Elmslie

Elmslie_Bruce.jpg

Bruce T. Elmslie


Interim Chair and Professor of Economics
603.862.3347
bte@hopper.unh.edu

Fields of Specialization:

International trade; history of economic thought; growth theory

Education:

Ph.D. University of Utah in Economics
B.S. (Economics, Finance, Management), Westminster College

 


Recent Research:

“So, What Did You Do Last Night? The Economics of Infidelity,” (with E. Tebaldi), Kyklos, forthcoming, fall 2008.
“Considering the Source:  Does Country of Origin of FDI Matter to Economic Growth?” (with T. Ford and J. Rork), Journal of Regional Science, May 2008.
“Foreign Direct Investment, Economic Growth, and the Human Capital Threshold,” (with T. Ford and J. Rork), Review of International Economics, 16(1), 96-113, 2008.
"Sexual Orientation and Labor Market Discrimination," (with Edinaldo Tebaldi), Journal of Labor Research, Vol. 28, No. 3, 2007.
"Discrimination and Growth: The Distribution across Skills Matters," (with N. Sedgley), Economics Letters, Vol. 90, 2006.
"The Chain Version of Comparative Advantage: An Empirical Investigation," (with N. Cavusoglu), Review of World Economics (Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv), Vol. 141, No. 3, 2005.
"Sexual Orientation and Labor Supply," (with E. Tebaldi), Applied Economics, fVol. 38, 2006.
"The Conventional Wage Share vs. Full Employment: Implications for the Development of Growth Theory," (with N. Sedgley), Cambridge Journal of Economics, September 2004.
"Adam Smith and Noneconomic Objectives," Review of International Economics, Vol. 12, No. 4, 2004.

Honors & Awards:

Whittemore School of Business and Economics Excellence in Research Award, 2007

Whittemore School of Business and Economics Excellence in Teaching Award, 2006

University of New Hampshire Outstanding Associate Professor, 2002

Reginald F. Atkins Endowed Chair in Economics 1998-2001.

 

Personal Web Site:
http://pubpages.unh.edu/~bte/