Sandeep Bhattacharya

Senior Lecturing Fellow in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Sanford School of Public Policy

Schools

  • Sanford School of Public Policy

Links

Biography

Sanford School of Public Policy

Sandeep Bhattacharya received his Ph.D. in Economics in 2010 from Georgia State University, and graduated from the Master''s in Public Policy Program at Duke University in May 2005. He graduated from St. Stephen''s College, Delhi University, with a B.A. (Honors) degree in Economics in 1988 and completed his Master''s degree in Economics from the Delhi School of Economics in 1990. Bhattacharya is the author of "Aspects of tax spillovers: Is there a ''worldwide'' tax burden?" (VDM-Verlag, 2011). He has several years of work experience in the private and public sector outside academia, including with the Indian Revenue Service (Customs and Excise) and has provided technical assistance on behalf of the IFC/World Bank group, GIZ and DCID to several governments. His fields of interest are Public Finance and Taxation, Budgeting, Analytical Methods, Impact Evaluation and Macro-fiscal Modelling.

Education

Ph.D., Georgia State University (2010)

M.P.P., Duke University (2005)

M.A., Delhi School of Economics (1990)

B.A., St. Stephen's College, Delhi, India (1988)

Read about executive education

Other experts

Oded Koenigsberg

Professor Oded Koenigsberg focuses his research on incorporating logistical constraints into firms’ marketing decisions (like pricing, product design, distribution channels and product line). He develops models that attempt to incorporate the cross-functional aspects of firms’ marketing manageme...

Yan Ji

Academic qualifications Ph.D. Economics, MIT, 2011 to 2017 M.S. Civil Engineering, MIT, 2009 to 2011 B.Eng. Automation, Tsinghua University, 2005 to 2009 ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Assistant Professor of Finance, HKUST Business School, 2017-present  Consultant, Inter-American Develo...

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.