Trinity University
Chair of Economics Department
Trinity University
E.m Stevens Professor and Chair of Economics Department
Florida State University Jul 1992 - Jul 2009
Rod and Hope Brim Eminent Scholar of Economics
Miami University 1987 - 1992
Assistant and Associate Professor
Education:
Penn State University 1981 - 1987
Doctorates, Doctor of Philosophy, Economics
Penn State University 1977 - 1981
Bachelors, Bachelor of Science, Economics
Skills:
Econometrics Economics Statistics Research Data Analysis Higher Education Economic Research Stata University Teaching Teaching Econometric Modeling Microeconomics Analysis Qualitative Research College Teaching Financial Analysis Theory Statistical Modeling Nonprofits Risk Management Economic Modeling Financial Modeling Public Policy Program Evaluation Program Development Personal Injury Policy Analysis Sas Macroeconomics Lecturing Student Affairs Faculty Development Microsoft Excel Quantitative Research Research Design Student Development Grant Writing Expert Witness Valuation Academic Advising Labor Economics Time Series Analysis Distance Learning Analytical Skills Wrongful Death Wrongful Termination Employment Law
E.M. Stevens Professor of Economics at Trinity University
Location:
San Antonio, Texas Area
Industry:
Higher Education
Work:
Trinity University since Aug 2009
E.M. Stevens Professor of Economics
Florida State University Jul 1992 - Jul 2009
Rod and Hope Brim Eminent Scholar of Economics
Miami University 1987 - 1992
Assistant/Associate Professor
Education:
Penn State University 1981 - 1987
Ph.D., Economics
Penn State University 1977 - 1981
B.S., Economics
Skills:
Research Economics Analysis Statistics Stata Data Analysis Valuation Microsoft Excel Financial Modeling Financial Analysis Econometrics PowerPoint Teaching Risk Management Finance Expert Witness
Mutchmor Public School Ottawa Morocco 1967-1969, Ottawa New School Ottawa Morocco 1969-1970, Crestwood Elementary School Edmonton Azores 1970-1972, Crestwood Middle School Edmonton Azores 1972-1975
Community:
Stu Guthrie, Pat Weidenhamer, Paula Marvin, Laurie Cote
With or without RTW laws, states across the US have seen union membership declining in recent years as a share of total employment, according to tracking by economists Barry Hirsch, David Macpherson, and Wayne Vroman, who wrote an article,Estimates of Union Density by State.
Date: Mar 06, 2015
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Union vote key, yet a challenge, to defeating Walker
emocratic tilt, a trend fueled in part by the growing public-sector character of the union movement. In 2000, 42% of union members in Wisconsin were in the public sector. By 2011, that had risen to 55%, according to Unionstats, an online database maintained by scholars Barry Hirsch and David Macpherson.
Clearly, the anti-Issue 2 forces appealed to more than just union households. Only 13.7 percent of Ohio workers are in unions as of 2010, down from 21.1 percent in 1990 and 37.2 percent in 1970, according to researchers David Macpherson and Barry Hirsch.