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Abigail Tay

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Deputy Dean and Faculty Chair, Associate Professor II of Economics

Area of Expertise:

Applied Microeconomics

Abigail Tay is the Deputy Dean and Faculty Chair. She is also an Associate Professor II of Economics at Asia School of Business, and a Research Affiliate at MIT.

She is an applied microeconomist, with research interests in industrial organization and health economics. Abigail received her BA (with 1st Class Honours) from University of Cambridge and her PhD in Economics from Stanford University.

Prior to moving to Kuala Lumpur, she was Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at Columbia University and a Visiting Fellow in the Department of Economics at Yale University.

  • “Why (no) global competition is a tough choice,” joint with Gerald Willmann The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance vol. 45, May 2005
  • “Assessing Competition in Hospital Care Markets: the Importance of Accounting for Quality Differentiation,” RAND Journal of Economics 34(4), Winter 2003

Abigail Tay is the Deputy Dean and Faculty Chair. She is also an Associate Professor II of Economics at Asia School of Business, and a Research Affiliate at MIT.

She is an applied microeconomist, with research interests in industrial organization and health economics. Abigail received her BA (with 1st Class Honours) from University of Cambridge and her PhD in Economics from Stanford University.

Prior to moving to Kuala Lumpur, she was Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at Columbia University and a Visiting Fellow in the Department of Economics at Yale University.

  • “Why (no) global competition is a tough choice,” joint with Gerald Willmann The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance vol. 45, May 2005
  • “Assessing Competition in Hospital Care Markets: the Importance of Accounting for Quality Differentiation,” RAND Journal of Economics 34(4), Winter 2003