Washington College

Department of Economics

Get to Know the Department Faculty


Lisa Daniels

Lisa Daniels

Associate Professor of Economics
Chair, Department of Economics

E-mail: ldaniels2@washcoll.edu
Phone: (800) 422-1782, ext. 7881
Office: William Smith 335

Education

B.S. West Chester University, 1981; M.S., University of Wisconsin, 1988; Ph.D., Michigan State University, 1995.

Curriculum Vitae (PDF)

Office Hours

TTH, 2-3:30

Teaching Interests

Macroeconomics, International Development, Economics of Poverty

Research Interests

Poverty, Micro-enterprises

Biographic Note

Professor Daniels joined the Washington College faculty in the fall of 1996. She specializes in economic development with a focus on Africa. After graduating from West Chester University in 1981 with her BA in Business Administration, she began her work in Africa in 1982 when she joined the Peace Corps in Cameroon. After four years in Cameroon as an advisor to coffee, cocoa, and palm oil marketing cooperatives, Professor Daniels returned to the U.S. to pursue an MS (1988) in Agricutlural Economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a Ph.D. in Agricultrual Economics from Michigan State University, which she completed in 1995.

While studying for her graduate degrees, she continued to work in Africa on horticultural marketing in the Gambia, market information systems in Chad, and small enterprises in Botsawana, Malawi, and Zimbabawe. Following the completion of her Ph.D., she directed a national survey of small enterprises in Kenya. Overall, she spent a total of eight years living and working in Africa.

During her time at Washington College, Professor Daniels has continued to do research on the small enterprise sector in the third world. In 1999 she designed a survey to measure profits and net worth of small enterprises as a consultant for a project funded by the United States Agency for International Development. In 2003, she made three trips to Bangladesh where she was the team leader of a national survey of the small-enterprise sector. She has also published several articles on the small-enterprise sector in the Journal of International Development, World Development, Economic Development and Cultural Change, Small Enterprise Development, and Les BDS, L'Actualité des Services aux Enterprises. Her research also appears in two book chapters in African Development Perspectives Yearbook, and African Entrepreneurship: Themes and Realities.

In addition to her work on the small enterprise sector, Professor Daniels and a co-author recently conducted research related to the impact of world markets on poor farmers in Benin. This research was used by Brazil and 14 other countries as part of testimony at the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. It will also be published in Agricultural Economics.

Courses Taught

ECN 111, Principles of Macroeconomic Theory
ECN 112, Principles of Microeconomic Theory
ECN 212, Intermediate Microeconomic Theory
ECN 215, Data Analysis I
ECN 218, Economic Development
ECN 219, Human Resource Economics
ECN 312, Public Finance
ECN 415, Government and Business
GEN 112, Gender and Multiculturalism
CNW 242, World Poverty and Inequality

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