https://scholar.harvard.edu/pnikolov/my-research-group-1
And then there’s PN from Binghamton who’s trying to become Chetty
Lol, tried to become Chetty, instead got denied tenure at SUNY Binghamton.
BJ hates PN. BJ is the one posting weird threads about Binghamton and department members, including SP. When you are a 60-year-old guy who does not publish much and is married to a butt-u*gly Mingme*i, that's what you do: you spend your post-AARP time on EJMR than spending it with your family.
https://scholar.harvard.edu/pnikolov/my-research-group-1
And then there’s PN from Binghamton who’s trying to become ChettyLol, tried to become Chetty, instead got denied tenure at SUNY Binghamton.
BJ hates PN and he is the one posting these threads. When you are a dept chair and married to a butt ugly Chinese Mingm'ei, you prefer to post on EJMR. ..and that's that the 60-year old BJ from Binghampton
I ggoded you because I agree with you mostly but the crappy job market and this crony profession has made it near impossible to make it as a researcher in Economics unless you play this careerist game.
Predoc is a joke. So after undergrad, you want to take an underpaid job, only to get a letter that will help you when applying for an even more underpaid 6 year program, followed by a job market that will most likely result in a two year postdoc.
If you are interested in economics research and you have original ideas - apply for a PhD. If you enjoy the PhD - consider the academic job market. Don't be a careerist, trying to score the right points in predoc, summer schools, undergrad seminars. Just join a PhD program, take the courses, and start working on your papers.
for finance - any (V)HRM finance professor that is tenured and publishes well in finance, preferably VHRM. Usually they cannot place in economics well -- unless they're an editor at a top 5 journal and/or is a member of every prestige club like j. stroebel, james choi, andrei shleifer, etc. Same goes to marketing pretty much.
for econ - almost always a sacred zipcode bsd
for finance - any (V)HRM finance professor that is tenured and publishes well in finance, preferably VHRM. Usually they cannot place in economics well -- unless they're an editor at a top 5 journal and/or is a member of every prestige club like j. stroebel, james choi, andrei shleifer, etc. Same goes to marketing pretty much.
for econ - almost always a sacred zipcode bsd
a leader of a field like rohini pande can place very well for econ given she/he makes calls everywhere. Anyone else it really depends on individual fixed effects