Job title:
Assistant Professor, School of Economics, Peking University
Telephone: 62769539
E-mail: yuanye.econ@pku.edu.cn
Fax:62769539
Working Experience:
2019–present Assistant Professor, School of Economics, Peking University
2017–2019 Lecturer, Department of Economics, National University of Singapore
2016–2017 Assistant Researcher, Department of Economics, National University of Singapore
2012–2016 Teaching Assistant, Department of Economics, National University of Singapore
Research field:
Medical Economics
Health Economics
Medical Big Data Analysis
Public Economics
Education background:
PhD, Economics, National University of Singapore, 2012–2017
Bachelor of Science with Honours, Applied Mathematics, National University of Singapore, 2008–2012
Teaching:
Development Economics, Peking University, Fall semester, 2020/2021 academic year
Advanced Econometrics 2, Peking University, Spring Semester, 2019/2020 academic year
Healthcare Economics, National University of Singapore, Summer Semester, 2018/2019 Academic Year
Publications:
Differential responses to market competition by private and public hospitals in China: a longitudinal analysis (with Junjian Yi, and Shaoyang Zhao), The Lancet , 2019 (394): S37.
The glorified mothers of sons: Evidence from sex composition and parental time allocation in rural China, (with Yi Fan, Junjian Yi, and Junsen Zhang), Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization , 2018 (145), 249-260.
The Dynamic Effect of Rural-to-Urban Migration on Inequality in Source Villages: System GMM Estimates from Rural China, (with Wei Ha, Junjian Yi, and Junsen Zhang), China Economic Review , 2016, Volume 37, pp 27-39.
Working papers:
Information Provision, Patient Sorting, and Healthcare Quality (with Changcheng Song, Nan Yang and Junjian Yi), Submitted.
Medical malpractice lawsuit and defensive medicine in China (with Gordon Liu, Junjian Yi, and Shaoyang Zhao), Submitted.
Education and the quality of life (with Kamhon Kan and Junjian Yi)
Childhood adversity and inter-generational transmission of mental disorder: Evidence from Chinese Great Famine (with Xuekang Sha)