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Biographical
Sketch for David Lam
Professor,
Department of Economics
Research
Professor, Population
Studies Center
University of Michigan
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David Lam is Professor in the Department of Economics and Research Professor
in the Population Studies Center
at the University
of Michigan. He received a M.A. in demography in 1982 and a
Ph.D. in economics in 1983 from the University
of California, Berkeley. Professor Lam’s research focuses on the
interaction of economics and demography in developing countries, including
analysis of the economics of population growth, fertility, marriage, and aging.
He has worked extensively in Brazil
and South Africa,
where his research analyzes links between education, labor markets, and income
inequality. He was a Fulbright visiting researcher at the Institute for Applied
Economic Research in Rio de Janeiro
in 1989-90. He was a visiting
professor in the School of Economics at the University of Cape Town in 1997-98 and again in 2004-06. His
collaborations with the University of Cape Town include the
Cape Area Panel Study, a longitudinal survey of young people in Cape Town supported by the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Professor Lam has published widely in leading economics and demography
journals. His publications include “The
Dynamics of Population Growth, Differential Fertility, and Inequality,” American Economic Review, 1986;
“Declining Inequality in Schooling in Brazil and Its Effect on Inequality in
Earnings,” Journal of Development Economics,1992 (with Deborah Levison);
Effects of Family Background on Earnings and Returns to Schooling: Evidence From Brazil,” Journal of Political Economy, 1993 (with Robert Schoeni);
“Demographic Variables and Income Inequality,” in Handbook of Population and Family Economics, 1997; “The Effects of
Education on Fertility, Labor Supply, and Investments in Children, with
Evidence from Brazil,” Journal of Human
Resources, 1999, (with Suzanne Duryea).
Professor Lam has been on the faculty at the University of Michigan
since 1983. He served for many years as
coordinator of the program in economic demography, a joint program between the Population Studies Center
and the Department of Economics. He was Director of the Population
Studies Center
from 1994 to 2003, and also served as Director of the Michigan Center
on the Demography of Aging. He has been a member of the Board of Directors
of the Population Association of America and a member of the Committee on
Population of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences. He has served as an
advisor or consultant to the World Bank, the U.S. National Institutes of Health,
the United Nations Population Division, and the South Africa Office of the
Presidency.