Philip E. Graves

Philip E. Graves, Ph.D., Northwestern University, 1973, is a professor whose interests currently lie in environmental economics, urban/regional economics, and applied price theory. His recent research emphasizes the role of lobor supply market failures for optimal public goods provision and for the willingness-to-accept versus willingness-to-pay disparity. Similar issues of labor supply, as it varies according to whether technological progress occurs predominantly for new goods vis-á-vis existing goods, underlie Graves’s recent work in economic growth and business cycles. He continues his long-standing interest in the role of amenities in the location and relocation decisions of households and in monetary economics, while pursuing several topics in applied microeconomics.
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