Metadata
Title
Richard Holden
Category
undergraduate
UUID
96251c4f72b249d5920d255692212004
Source URL
https://grandchallenges.unsw.edu.au/lead/richard-holden
Parent URL
https://grandchallenges.unsw.edu.au/themes/inequality
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:29:42+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Richard Holden

Source: https://grandchallenges.unsw.edu.au/lead/richard-holden Parent: https://grandchallenges.unsw.edu.au/themes/inequality

Scroll For More

Read

07.03.2019

Richard Holden

Richard Holden is one of Australia’s leading economists. 

As Professor of Economics at UNSW Business School his research focuses on contract theory, law and economics, and political economy. He has written on topics including: political districting, the boundary of the firm, incentives in organisations, mechanism design, and voting rules. Richard received a PhD from Harvard University and was a faculty member at MIT and the University of Chicago before returning to Australia.

He is a regular columnist and media commentator on a wide range of economic issues in Australia and internationally. He has published in leading economics journals such as the Quarterly Journal of Economics and American Economic Review. His popular writings have appeared in outlets such as the New York Times, Australian Financial Review, The Australian and The Conversation where he publishes his regular column Vital Signs.

Visit Richard's faculty page for more information, and watch his talk "How to redistribute capital, mitigating inequality without killing productivity" in this video recorded live at UNSOMNIA.

You may be interested in:

[Read

Sex and gender differences in medical research impact patients and the economy

COVID-19 is the latest example of a disease that affects men and women differently, with more women being infected in many countries and more men dying as a result of it.](https://newsroom.unsw.edu.au/news/health/sex-and-gender-differences-medical-research-impact-patients-and-economy)

[Read

Needs of lower-income apartment residents must be considered for urban cohesion

Lower-income households are disproportionately represented in and affected by challenges associated with apartment living, a new report finds.](/article/needs-lower-income-apartment-residents-must-be-considered-urban-cohesion)

[Read

The costs of the shutdown are overestimated -- they're outweighed by its $1 trillion benefit

What are the benefits of the shutdown? The value can be calculated based on lives saved plus any indirect economic or health benefits.](/article/costs-shutdown-are-overestimated-theyre-outweighed-its-1-trillion-benefit)

Follow us on Grand Challenges