Peter K. Schott
Juan Trippe Professor of International Economics
Peter Schott's research focuses on how firms and workers respond to globalization. His most recent projects examine the decline of U.S. manufacturing employment during the 2000s, the relative export quality of developing versus developed economies, and the relationship between trade policy and firm productivity.
Education
- PhD, The Anderson School at UCLA, 1999
- MS, UCLA, 1995
- BS, University of Pennsylvania, 1990
Articles
The Surprisingly Swift Decline of U.S. Manufacturing Employment
P. K. Schott and J. Pierce
American Economic Review, issue 7, vol. 106, pp. 1632-62
2016
Trade Liberalization and Embedded Institutional Reform: Evidence from Chinese Exporters
P. Schott, W. Khandelwal. and S. Wei
American Economic Review, issue 6, vol. 103, pp. 2169-95
2013
The Empirics of Firm Heterogeneity and International Trade
P. Schott, A. Bernard, J. B. Jensen and S. Redding
Annual Review of Economics, vol. 4, pp. 283-313
2012
Estimating Cross-Country Differences in Product Quality*
J. C. Hallak and P. K. Schott
The Quarterly Journal of Economics, issue 1, vol. 126, pp. 417-474
2011
Working Papers
Does Trade Liberalization with China Influence U.S. Elections?
P. K. Schott, Y. Che, Y. Lu, J. Pierce, and Z. Tao
2016
Trade Policy and the Structure of Supply Chains
P. K. Schott, S. Heise, J. Pierce, and G. Schaur
2015
Achievements
- Yale SOM Alumni Association Teaching Award, Yale School of Management Alumni Association, MBA 2010, EMBA 2013
- Citations of Excellence Award, Emerald Management Reviews, 2012
- National Science Foundation Research Grant, “Estimating Export Quality”, 2006-2009
- National Science Foundation Research Grant, “Firms and Product Choice in International Trade”, 2003-2008