Search
Showing 161 - 170 of 499
KD Frick (any pronouns) is a professor who teaches economics for decision-making, business leadership and human values, frameworks for analyzing health care markets, and a course on how the U.S. health care system in the past, present, and future facilitates innovation. Frick studied health policy and administration at Penn State, followed by economics and health services research at the University of Michigan. In 1996, she joined the faculty of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, where she still has joint appointments. She moved to a leadership position at the Carey Business
Other partnerships
Johns Hopkins Carey Business School partners with businesses, organizations, nonprofits, communities, and alumni to build for what’s next.
For Jorge Escalante (’18 Marketing), success comes from continents, Carey, and commerce
Jorge Escalante has a citizen-of-the-world life story, a dream job with Amazon—and some insights for others about what could define their careers.
Ensuring fairness in product assortment: a ‘win-win-win’
Product placement and display significantly influence what we choose to purchase. Ozge Sahin and Ruxian Wang study an algorithm that ensures minimum market exposure for all sellers which could benefit consumers.
Identifying fake physician reviews: The case for large language models
Professors Ritu Agarwal’s and Gordon Gao’s research demonstrate a new way to fight fraud in health care reviews using large language models.
Measuring societal impact in the here and now
Deeksha Gupta’s research examines the pace of change involving socially responsible investing in private capital markets and finds a “sea change” may be required in the way impact investors and the firms they acquire are incentivized.
Is the newest debate over the debt ceiling more than hot air?
Federal finance expert Kathleen Day says the U.S. debt limit and the associated potential crisis is more than just political—it has implications for individual and market economies.
Angelo Mele, PhD
Angelo Mele, PhD is an Associate Professor of Economics. He is also Affiliate Faculty at the Hopkins Population Center and Affiliate member of the Institute for Data Intensive Engineering and Science. Prof. Mele is an applied econometrician and his work focuses on the economic analysis of social interactions and their impact on socioeconomic performance at the individual and aggregate level. His research interests include the econometrics of social network models, the analysis of racial segregation and homophily, professional networks, social contagion in online media, software dependency