Salvador Navarro

Affiliate

Professor of Economics, University of Western Ontario

Discipline Economics
I bring formal identification analysis rooted in economic theory into applied problems that interest me on their own, not just as an example.

Salvador Navarro is a Professor of Economics and W. Glenn Campbell Fellow at the University of Western Ontario. He is also affiliated with the James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Center for Research on Wealth Inequality and Mobility and the Human Capital and Economic Opportunity Global Working Group at the University of Chicago, as well as with the Institute for Research on Poverty and with the Center for Demography and Ecology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research focuses on questions of identification in applied microeconomics problems. He has worked on topics related to education (credit constraints and information, effects of grade retention policy), crime (deterrence and the death penalty), discrimination (racial profiling), identification of dynamic models (dynamic treatment models, dynamic discrete choice models) and the analysis of plant-level productivity amongst others.

Navarro received an A.B. in Economics from ITESM Monterrey in 1996, an M.A. in Economics from El Colegio de Mexico in 1996, and an M.A. and Ph.D. both in Economics from the University of Chicago in 2001 and 2005 respectively.

Related Research Papers

Model Uncertainty and the Effect of Shall-Issue Right-to-Carry Laws on Crime

Publication

Capital Punishment and Deterrence: Understanding Disparate Results

Publication