Lawrence C. Marsh is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Economics. He taught graduate and undergraduate economics in the department for 30 years beginning in 1975. He served as the director of the Ph.D. program in economics for 13 years. He served on over 80 Ph.D. dissertation committees and has assisted a large number of Ph.D. students with their Ph.D. dissertations and subsequent research. His former graduate students have held a wide range of positions throughout the world such as in leading central banks and serving as key government advisors. Marsh has served as visiting professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business and at Avila University.
In 1990 he co-founded the Midwest Econometrics Group (MEG), which has continued to meet annually for over thirty years bringing researchers from around the world to at a major university or Federal Reserve Bank in the Midwest of the United States for the annual MEG conference.
In teaching he won the James A. Burns award for excellence in graduate teaching in 1990-1991 and was an O’Malley Award Nominee for undergraduate teaching in 1995-1996. In 2002-2003 he was selected as a Kaneb Faculty Teaching Fellow for excellence in teaching.
In quasi-retirement he spends his time writing and editing a variety of articles, books and newspaper columns. His latest book is “Money Flow in a Dynamic Economy: The new money flow paradigm explains economic inefficiency, instability, inequality, and the role of government.”
More information can be found at his book website.
Click here to receive Dr. Marsh’s monthly Money Flow Newsletter.