About Michael Clemens
Michael Clemens is professor in the Department of Economics at George Mason University, and a Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. He is also a Research Fellow at IZA, a Research Fellow at RFBerlin, a Distinguished Non-Resident Fellow at the Center for Global Development, and serves as an Associate Editor of the Journal of Economic Perspectives.
He primarily studies the economic effects and causes of migration around the world. He has published on migration, development, impact evaluation, and research replication, in peer-reviewed academic journals including the American Economic Review, and his research has been awarded the Royal Economic Society Prize.
Previously, Clemens made his professional home for 20 years at the Center for Global Development. He has also been an Affiliated Associate Professor of Public Policy at Georgetown University, a visiting scholar at New York University, and a consultant for the World Bank, Bain & Co., the Environmental Defense Fund, and the United Nations Development Program. He has lived and worked in Colombia, Brazil, and Turkey. He received his PhD from the Department of Economics at Harvard University, specializing in economic development, public finance, and economic history.
He primarily studies the economic effects and causes of migration around the world. He has published on migration, development, impact evaluation, and research replication, in peer-reviewed academic journals including the American Economic Review, and his research has been awarded the Royal Economic Society Prize.
Previously, Clemens made his professional home for 20 years at the Center for Global Development. He has also been an Affiliated Associate Professor of Public Policy at Georgetown University, a visiting scholar at New York University, and a consultant for the World Bank, Bain & Co., the Environmental Defense Fund, and the United Nations Development Program. He has lived and worked in Colombia, Brazil, and Turkey. He received his PhD from the Department of Economics at Harvard University, specializing in economic development, public finance, and economic history.