Corinne M. Krupp, Associate Professor of the Practice of Public Policy  

Corinne M. Krupp

Office Location: 268 Rubenstein Hall
Office Phone: (919) 613-9221
Email Address: cory.krupp@duke.edu

Mailing Address

Education:
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1990
M.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1986
B.A. in Economics (with Honors), Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 1984

Curriculum Vitae

Expertise:
Applied Economics
Debt and Macroeconomic Policy
Economic Growth and Development
International Trade Policy
Competition Policy

Recent Publications   (More Publications)

  1. W. Ascher and Corinne Krupp, Physical Infrastructure Investment, edited by Ascher and Krupp (co-editors) (Fall, 2010), Palgrave MacMillan  [abs].
  2. Krupp, C, Electrifying rural areas: Extending electricity infrastructure and services in developing countries, in Physical Infrastructure Development: Balancing the Growth, Equity, and Environmental Imperatives (May, 2010), pp. 203-224, Palgrave Macmillan US [doi] .
  3. Ascher, W; Krupp, C, Rethinking Physical Infrastructure Development, in PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT: BALANCING THE GROWTH, EQUITY, AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPERATIVES (2010), pp. 1-33 .
  4. Ascher, W; Krupp, C, Distributional Implications of Alternative Financing of Physical Infrastructure Development, in PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT: BALANCING THE GROWTH, EQUITY, AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPERATIVES (2010), pp. 35-68 .
  5. Krupp, C, Electrifying Rural Areas: Extending Electricity Infrastructure and Services in Developing Countries, in PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT: BALANCING THE GROWTH, EQUITY, AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPERATIVES (2010), pp. 203-224 .

Research Description: International economics: trade and finance policy; antidumping law; competition policy; European Union trade and finance issues; relationship between international trade, economic growth, and development

Bio/Profile
Corinne (Cory) Krupp Krupp received her B.A. degree in economics from Indiana University (1984) and her M.A. and Ph.D. in economics from the University of Pennsylvania (1986, 1990). Her primary fields are international trade and finance, and econometrics and statistics. She worked at Michigan State University (1989-1997) as a tenure-track assistant professor where she taught international trade, finance, and microeconomics at both the undergraduate and graduate levels (MA and PhD).

In 1998, she joined the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University as a full-time Visiting Associate Professor, and effective July 1, 2005, became the Director of Graduate Studies for the Masters' in International Development Policy (MIDP) in the Duke Center for International Development. In this capacity, she directs the mid-career MA program, as well as teaches. Recent courses include International Trade and Policy, Economics Foundations of Development, Microeconomic Policy Tools, European Union Trade and Finance Issues, and Macroeconomic Policy and International Finance.

Her primary research interests are in the general area of industrial organization and international trade. Specifically, she has worked on modeling strategic firm responses to the antidumping law, and conducted empirical investigations of the impact of antidumping investigations on domestic and foreign competitors in a variety of industries. Currently, she is working on issues concerning the use and effectiveness of industrial policy as a development strategy; and, regulation of the electricity sector and rural access in developing countries. Her most recent publication is an empirical analysis of the effects from upstream antidumping cases on downstream customers: Corinne M. Krupp and Susan Skeath, “Evidence on the Upstream and Downstream Impacts of Antidumping Cases,” North American Journal of Economics and Finance 78 (2002), p. 1-16.