Stephen C. Smith (economist)

Stephen C. Smith
Born (1955-04-24) April 24, 1955
Nationality United States
Institution George Washington University
Field Development economics, Poverty, Economics of participation
School or
tradition
New institutional economics
Alma mater Cornell University
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Stephen Charles Smith (born April 24, 1955) is an economist, author, and educator. He is Professor of Economics and International Affairs[1] at George Washington University, where he is Director of the Institute for International Economic Policy.[2] The focus of IIEP is international trade, international finance, and development economics, with current initiatives on climate change adaptation, economics of ultra-poverty, development in China and US-China economic relations, and global economic governance. Stephen Smith is also a Non-resident Senior Fellow of the Brookings Institution;[3] and a Research Fellow of the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).[4] He has also served as the director of The George Washington University's Research Program in Poverty, Development, and Globalization.[5]

Background

Smith received his PhD in economics from Cornell University in 1983 for thesis titled On Employment and Local Public Goods in Labor-Managed and Participatory Firms and Labor Unions: Institutions, Economic Theory and Econometrics[6] and has been a Fulbright Research Scholar and a Fulbright Senior Specialist. He has held a Jean Monnet Research Fellowship[7] at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy. Smith joined the faculty of The George Washington University in 1983. He is also a research fellow at the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).[4] Smith was as an Associate Editor of the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization from 2007–2013.[8] He served as first director of the International Development Studies Program at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University. Smith also serves on the Advisory Council of BRAC USA.

The focus of IIEP is international trade, international finance, and development economics, with current initiatives on climate change adaptation, economics of ultra-poverty, development in China and US-China economic relations, and global economic governance.

Work

Smith is co-author with Michael Todaro of Economic Development[9] (12th edition, Pearson Education and Addison-Wesley, 2014). He is the author of Ending Global Poverty: A Guide to What Works[10] (Palgrave Macmillan, hardcover 2005, paperback with afterword 2009). He is also co-editor with Jennifer Brinkerhoff and Hildy Teegen of NGOs and the Millennium Development Goals: Citizen Action to Reduce Poverty[11] (Palgrave Macmillan, June 2007). Smith is the author of other publications including approximately three dozen journal articles.

Stephen Smith teaches courses in development economics. He has been a consultant for the World Bank, the International Labour Office (ILO, Geneva), the World Institute for Development Economics Research (UN-WIDER, Helsinki), and the United Nations Development Programme. Smith has done on-site research and program work in several regions of the developing world including Bangladesh, China, Ecuador, India, Uganda, and the Former Yugoslavia.

Contributions

Poverty

Smith focuses on extreme poverty, or ultra-poverty.[12] Smith’s Ending Global Poverty has a local program and microeconomic focus, in contrast to more macro approaches of Jeffrey Sachs' The End of Poverty, Bill Easterly’s White Man’s Burden and Paul Collier’s Bottom Billion. Smith describes 16 poverty traps, most operating at local levels, and considers solutions. Some of his recent work addresses problems of adaptation to climate change in low income countries.[13]

Economic development

Smith is co-author of Economic Development,[14] the leading text in that field, now in its 12th edition. It begins with comprehensive treatments of institutions, comparative development, and traditional and new theories of development. It examines in-depth development policymaking and roles of market, state, and civil society. The text examines key topics of poverty and inequality, population growth causes and consequences, urbanization and rural-urban migration; education and health in development; agricultural transformation and rural development; environment and development; international trade and development strategy; balance of payments, debt, financial crises, and stabilization policies; foreign finance, investment, and aid; and finance and fiscal policy for development.

Participation

In addition to his work on poverty and development economics, Smith has conducted research on the economics of participation, including works councils, employee stock ownership plan, and worker cooperatives, including research in Italy, Spain, Germany, China, and India. On worker cooperatives, Smith investigated worker coop coexistence with conventional firms; he found evidence from Italy consistent with the hypothesis that coops compete using small innovations contributed by workers and or specializing within sectors in artisan-quality products.[15] He conducted an empirical test of the “Ward effect” theory in which worker coops would reduce output when its market price rose; Smith’s findings cast doubt on this claim, and his results implied that worker coops place positive weight on members’ employment when making production decisions.[16] Smith interpreted clustering patterns of worker coops as helping explain their rarity: Formal and informal coop leagues provide scale economies that help make coops viable; but as leagues need coops to start them the result is a “chicken and egg problem.”[17] Smith also introduced market failure rationales for works council and co-determination legislation.[18]

References

  1. "Stephen C. Smith Faculty Website".
  2. "Institute for International Economic Policy University Website".
  3. "Research Fellow Website".
  4. 1 2 "IZA Research Fellow Website".
  5. "Research Program on Poverty Development and Globalization University Website".
  6. Smith, Stephen Charles. "On Employment and Local Public Goods in Labor-Managed and Participatory Firms and Labor Unions: Institutions, Economic Theory and Econometrics". ProQuest. Retrieved January 14, 2014.
  7. "Jean Monnet Fellowships Website".
  8. "Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization Website".
  9. "Economic Development 11th Edition Publisher's Website".
  10. "Ending Global Poverty Publisher's Website".
  11. "NGOs and the Millennium Development Goals: Citizen Action to Reduce Poverty Publisher's Website".
  12. http://www.un.org/docs/ecosoc/meetings/2007/amr2007/Stephen%20Smith.pdf and http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/poverty/PovertyForum/Documents/forum.report.pdf
  13. "Economics of Adaptation in Low Income Countries".
  14. "Economic Development publisher's website". Retrieved July 2014.
  15. "Innovation and Market Strategy in Italian Industrial Cooperatives: Econometric Evidence on Organizational Comparative Advantage," Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 23, 3, 303 321, 1994
  16. Does employment matter to the labor-managed firm? Some theory and an empirical illustration, Economic analysis and workers management, 1984, cited in Bonin, John, Derek C. Jones and Louis Putterman, pp. 1299–1300, ‘Theoretical and Empirical Research on the Labor Managed Firm: Will the Twain Ever Meet?’ Journal of Economic Literature, Fall 1993.
  17. Smith, "Blooming Together or Wilting Alone? Network Externalities and Mondrag.n and La Lega Co-operative Networks," UNU-WIDER, 2001, https://ideas.repec.org/p/unu/wpaper/dp2001-27.html.
  18. "On the economic rationale for codetermination law," Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 16, 3, 261–281, 1991

External links

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