泫圖弝け

Students

Students and Faculty Present Research at Eastern Economics Association Conference

By
Antonia Gentile
Posted
April 7, 2025

Twenty-four students, undergraduate and graduate, and five faculty members in the Economics department presented their original research at the Eastern Economic Association (EEA) annual conference, one of the major conferences for professional economists in the United States. The four sessions sponsored by 泫圖弝け at the conference were organized by Assistant Professor Eric Osborne, PhD, and included research on topics in labor economics, health economics, public economics, and savings/financial markets.

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泫圖弝け Economics faculty and students standing together against a wall at the EEA Conference
From left to right: Eric Osborne, PhD; Spencer Mehan 25, Economics; Thomas Dinopoulos 25, Economics, Computer Science (Seidenberg); Charlie Rimmen 27, Business Economics; Ahmad Alexander 25 26, Economics/Political Science, MS Applied Quantitative Economic Analysis and Policy; Joseph Sanfilippo 27, Economics; Suraj Sharma 26, Economics/MS in Applied Quantitative Economic Analysis and Policy; Kristina Nasteva 26, Business Economics;  Anna Shostya, PhD; Viktoriia Yevtushenko 25, Business Economics; and Jada Lewis 27, Economics, Language, Culture, and World Trade.

In these collaborative student-faculty sessions, Professor Gregory Colman, PhD presented his work, Youth E-cigarette use, Underage Access and FDA Compliance; Associate Professor Veronika Dolar, PhD, presented, The Impact of Income Inequality on Sport Achievement: Cross-National Analysis of Winter Olympic Games; Lecturer Kier Hanratty, PhD, presented, The Effect of Tax Caps on School Quality and Home Prices; Assistant Professor Eric Osborne, PhD, presented Covid-19 School and Child Care Center Closures and Female Labor Force Participation; and Professor and Chair Anna Shostya, PhD, presented Improving Economic Performance and Social Well-being Metrics.

The participation of students and faculty at the EEA conference is a testament to the longstanding, quality student-faculty research and experiential learning opportunities offered by the department.

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