Society for Economic Measurement

The Society for Economic Measurement, or SEM, is a scientific learned society in the field of economics. It was founded on August 24, 2013 by William A. Barnett in order to "promote research on economic measurement, using advanced tools from economic theory, econometrics, aggregation theory, experimental economics, mathematics, and statistics".[3] Nobel Laureate James Heckman will take over as the society's second president in 2019 for a three-year term in office. The goal of the SEM is to promote in economics—given the constraints of a social science—the implementation of the strict rules of measurement and data gathering standards used in the physical sciences. Carnegie Mellon University, the Center for Financial Stability, and the University of Kansas are sponsors of the society.

Society for Economic Measurement
FormationAugust 24, 2013
Legal statusLearned society in economics
PurposeTo promote research on economic measurement, using advanced tools from economic theory, econometrics, aggregation theory, experimental economics, mathematics, and statistics[1]
Region served
United States, Internationally
President
William A. Barnett, University of Kansas and Center for Financial Stability
Main organ
Executive Committee[2]
Websitesem.society.cmu.edu

Activities

SEM Fellows

The full list of the 2013-2014 SEM Fellows is posted here: SEM 2013-2014 Fellows.

Officers

A. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE:

1. President:

  • W. A. Barnett, U. of Kansas and Center for Financial Stability, NY City

2. Vice Presidents:

  • Yves Balasko, University of York, UK
  • Ernst Berndt (MIT professor), MIT
  • Walter Erwin Diewert, U of British Columbia, Canada
  • Ester Faia, Goethe University, Germany
  • Kaye Husbands Fealing, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Dennis Fixler, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Department of Commerce
  • Barbara Fraumeni, U. of Southern Maine; Central U. of Finance and Economics, Beijing
  • Dale Jorgenson, Harvard
  • Ken Judd, Stanford (Hoover)
  • Julia Lane, New York University
  • Jacques Mairesse, CREST (ENSAE, Paris), UNU-MERIT (Maastricht University, Maastricht)
  • J. Peter Neary, Oxford U., U.K.
  • Paul Schreyer, Deputy Director, OECD Statistics Directorate, Paris
  • Apostolos Serletis, U. of Calgary, Canada
  • Karl Shell, Cornell
  • Marcel Timmer, University of Groningen, Netherlands
  • Sevin Yeltekin, Carnegie Mellon U.

3. Members at Large:

4. Member by Appointment of the Center for Financial Stability:

5. Secretary-Treasurer:

  • Stephen Spear, Carnegie Mellon U.

B. COUNCIL:

Charter Council Members:

  • Bert Balk, Rotterdam School of Management, Netherlands
  • Marcelle Chauvet, U. of California Riverside
  • Robert Feenstra, U. of California at Davis
  • Kevin Fox, U. of New South Wales
  • Steve Hanke, Johns Hopkins U.
  • Jonathan Haskel, Imperial College, London, U.K.
  • Robert Hill, U. of Graz, Austria
  • Charles Hulten, U. of Maryland
  • Robert Inklaar, U. of Groningen, Netherlands
  • Peter Ireland, Boston College
  • Fredj Jawadi, U. of Évry and France Business School, France
  • Koji Nomura, Keio U., Tokyo, Japan
  • Lee Ohanian, UCLA
  • Philippe de Peretti, University of Paris 1, Sorbonne, France
  • Prasada Rao, University of Queensland, Australia
  • Stephen Turnovsky, U. of Washington
  • Myrna Wooders, Vanderbilt University
  • Nicholas Yannelis, U. of Iowa

References

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