Chih Ming Tan
Professor Chih
Ming Tan is the Page Endowed Chair in Applied Economics at the Department of
Economics & Finance, Nistler College of Business and Public Administration
(NCoBPA), University of North Dakota. He is also the Associate Dean for
Research at NCoBPA and has been in that role since October 2019. He previously
served as the Director of the Master of Science in Applied Economics and
Predictive Analytics (MSAEPA) program from October 2016 to July 2022.
Professor Tan
received his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in
2004. He received his B.Sc. (First Class Honors) and M.Sc. in Economics from
the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), UK, in 1996 and
1997, respectively. Prior to joining UND, Professor Tan taught for nine years at Tufts
University and Clark University in Massachusetts. He has also worked as an
Economic Analyst (NS) for the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Singapore.
Professor Tan
is an applied econometrician with research interests in the fields of inequality
and mobility, economic growth & development, global health, and
econometrics. He has applied advanced econometric approaches including machine
learning methods to uncover status traps in mobility processes as well as
endogenous social groupings in redistribution preferences. He has also applied
machine learning methods to uncover convergence clubs in economic growth across
countries. His interest in health economics is driven by the importance of
early childhood health on the accumulation of human capital that, in turn, has
deep implications for economic growth, inequality, and mobility. His recent
research has investigated the long-run impact of early health shocks on later
life cognitive development and mental health outcomes in a variety of settings
(China, Ghana, India, Indonesia, and Mexico). Professor Tan has also made substantive
contributions in econometric theory. He has taught macroeconomics and
econometrics at the Ph.D. level and currently teaches the core advanced
macroeconomics course, as well as a course on advanced program evaluation
methods, in the MSAEPA program.
Chih Ming Tan