David Yang | Department of Economics David Y Yang is a Professor in the Department of Economics at Harvard University and Director of the Center for History and Economics at Harvard David is a Faculty Research Fellow at NBER, a Global Scholar at CIFAR, and a fellow at BREAD David’s research focuses on political economy
David Y. Yang We describe and explain China’s policy experimentation since 1980, among the largest and most systematic in recent history We collect comprehensive data on policy experiments conducted in China over the past four decades We document three facts
David Y. Yang - Google Scholar David Y Yang Department of Economics, Harvard University Verified email at fas harvard edu - Homepage Articles 1–20
David Y. Yang | NBER Autocracy 2 0, exemplified by modern China, is economically robust, technologically advanced, globally engaged, and controlled through subtle and sophisticated methods What defines Chinas political economy, and what drives Autocracy 2 0? What is its future direction? I start by discussing two key
Curriculum Vitae - David Y. Yang Curriculum Vitae — David Y Yang Department of Economics 1805 Cambridge Street Littauer Center M-31 Cambridge, MA 02138 davidyang@fas harvard edu davidyyang com
如何评价哈佛大学David Yang仅用三年时间就荣升经济学正 . . . David Y Yang is a Professor in the Department of Economics at Harvard University and Director of the Center for History and Economics at Harvard David is a Faculty Research Fellow at NBER, a Global Scholar at CIFAR, and a fellow at BREAD David’s research focuses on political economy
David Y Yang | The Institute for Quantitative Social Science David Yang’s research focuses on political economy, behavioral and experimental economics, economic history, and cultural economics In particular, David studies the forces of stability and forces of changes in authoritarian regimes, drawing lessons from historical and contemporary China
David Y. Yang - Weatherhead Center for International Affairs Yvonne P L Lui Professor of Economics, Department of Economics; Director, Center for History and Economics, Harvard University Research interests: Political economy; China; technology; geopolitics; and history