Department of Economics

Dr. Martin Farnham

Dr. Martin Farnham

Ph.D. (Michigan), Assistant Professor

Research Interests: Public economics; labour economics; urban economics

 

 

 

 

 

 

Contact Dr. Farnham:

Office: BEC 354
Tel: 250-472-4422
Email: mfarnham@uvic.ca

Website

Bio

Martin Farnham received his PhD in economics from the University of Michigan. He teaches and does research at the intersection of labour economics, public economics, and urban economics. Professor Farnham has researched a variety of applied topics including the effect of government policy on residential mobility, the effect of housing wealth shocks on household behaviour, aspects of job design within firms, and climate change. He has published in leading economics journals including the American Economic Review and the Journal of Public Economics. His research has been reported on by media outlets including National Public Radio and the Wall Street Journal.

Publications

  • “Two Perspectives on Multiskilling and Product Market Volatility.” (with J. DeVaro); Labour Economics, forthcoming.
  • “House Prices and Marital Stability.” (with P. Sevak and L. Schmidt); American Economic Review, v101(3), May 2011 (Papers and Proceedings)
  • “State Fiscal Institutions and Empty-Nest Migration: Are Tiebout Voters Hobbled?”
    (with P. Sevak); Journal of Public Economics v. 90, 2006.
  • “Local Residential Sorting and Public Goods Provision: A Classroom Demonstration.”
    (with K. Brouhle, J. Corrigan, R. Croson, S. Garip, L. Habodaszova, L. Johnson, M. Johnson and D. Reiley); Journal of Economic Education, Fall 2005.

    Book Chapters:

  • “The Effect of Multiskilling on Labor Productivity, Product Quality, and Financial Performance.” (with E. Hutchinson), Advances in the Economics of Participatory and Labor-Managed Firms, (refereed), forthcoming.
  • “Guidelines for Writing the Honours Thesis." in Hume, S.E. (Ed.) Economics Writing (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson. (with E. Hutchinson), forthcoming

Courses

ECON 312, Urban Land Economics

ECON 325, Public Finance

ECON 345, Applied Econometrics

ECON 525, Public Finance and Fiscal Policy

Research Projects