Haldun Evrenk, Associate Professor

Haldun Evrenk, PhD

Associate Professor
Department of Economics

 

 

 

 

 

Phone: 617.573.8495
Fax: 617.994.4216
Email: hevrenk@suffolk.edu

Office: 73 Tremont St., Rm. 1024

Website

 

Education

  • PhD, Boston University
  • MA, Bogazici University
  • BS, Technical University of Istanbul

Research Interests

  • Political Economy
  • Development Economics
  • Public Finance
  • Industrial Organization

Employment

Suffolk University
Associate Professor (2009-present)
Assistant Professor (2004-2009)
 

Fellowships and Awards

  • Director of Graduate Studies Award, May 2004
  • Rosenstein-Rodan Prize (best paper in Economic Development), Institute for Economic Development, Boston University, May 2002
  • Boston University Teaching Fellowship, 1998-2004

Publications

Three-candidate competition when candidates have valence: the base case. Social Choice and Welfare 2009 Vol 32 p.157-168 (with an Erratum on the same issue p.169)

Third parties in equilibrium: comment and correction. Public Choice 2009 Vol 139 p. 121-124.

An exercise in political economy of tax reform. Economics Letters 2009 Vol 105 p. 81-82.

A Duopoly Model of Political Agency with Applications to Anti-corruption Reform The B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics 2009 Vol. 9 (Topics), Article 40.

Revenue Contest as a Regulatory Mechanism (with E. Unal Zenginobuz) Journal of Economics Vol 99, 211-237

 

Presentations

  • Midwest Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Chicago, April 2006
  • Economics Seminar, University of Connecticut, October 2004
  • Econometric Society North American Summer Meeting, Brown University, June 2004
  • Public Choice Society Meeting, Baltimore, March 2004
  • Economics Seminar, Suffolk University, February 2004
  • European Economic Association, Stockholm University, August 2003
  • Conference on Economic Design, New York University, July 2002
  • Institute for Economic Development/International Economics Seminars, Boston University, November 2001
  • The North-East Universities’ Development Consortium (NEUDC), Boston University, September 2001

Courses Taught

EC 101 - Principles of Microeconomics
EC 311 - Intermediate Microeconomics
EC 720 - Applied Microeconomics
EC 724 - Cost Benefit Analysis
EC 785 - Topics in Microeconomics
EC 821 - Advanced Microeconomic Theory
EC 824 - Political Economics