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Sanae Tashiro joined the faculty at Rowan University in 2005, after completing the Post Doctoral Fellowship at University of California, Davis. Professor Tashiro received her Ph.D. in economics from Claremont Graduate University in 2004, and her B.A. and M.A. in economics and statistics from the California State University, Los Angeles, in 1994 and 1996, respectively.
Her teaching interests focus on labor economics, public economics, urban economics, econometrics, and applied microeconomics. She previously taught economics principle courses at Chaffy College, and labor economics, econometrics, and public microeconomics at University of California, Davis. She teaches introduction to microeconomics, labor economics, and honors humanities: gateway to Asia in the fall semester in 2008 at Rowan University.
Her research interests lie in the area of labor economics, particularly topics such as wage determination and income inequality, the impact of technological change on the labor market, labor supply, fertility, time use, and the determinants of racial and gender wage differentials. She is currently working on topics in time use, fertility and religion, and the Japanese labor supply. Her research areas extend to the field of public finance and urban economics.
Last Modified: 09/01/08 |