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Thayer Watkins, Ph.D.
Office: DMH 214
Phone: (408) 924-5420
Email: watkinst@email.sjsu.edu
Ph.D. in Economics, University of Colorado, 1965
M.A. in Mathematics, San Jose State University, 1988
M.S. in Physics, San Jose State University, 1989
M.S. in Computer Science, San Jose State University, 1995
M.S. in Computational Physics, 1996
B.A. in Applied Mathematics, University of Colorado, 1961
Research
Interest
Special interest in Financial Economics
Published
in the Following Journals
Please refer to the personal site
Classes Taught
Please refer to the personal site
Biography
I was born and grew up in the area west of Denver, Colorado. Upon graduating
from high school I received a National Merit Scholarship which I used
to matriculate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. I did well
at MIT, majoring first in Chemical Engineering and later in Physics. But
because of the climate in Boston and for personal reasons I transferred
to the University of Colorado at Bolder where I majored in Applied Mathematics
in the Engineering School.
While attending college I worked summers doing technical work at a company
that produced rubber goods such as belts, hoses, and tires. One project
involved measuring the vulcanization of tires and hoses. The properties
of rubber improve with a degree of vulcanization (essentially cooking
time) up to a certain point and beyond that they deteriorate. I naively
presumed that the company wanted to achieve a degree of vulcanization
that produced a maximum in quality but other engineers informed me that
the target was not a maximum quality but instead something called an optimum
quality that had something to do with cost. The engineers themselves were
not to clear what was involved but they knew it had something to do with
economics. Out of curiosity I started reading economics books from the
company library on my lunch breaks. At the next opportunity I enrolled
in the introductory economics class at MIT Paul Samuelson was the star
of the Economics Department at MIT at the time. At the University of Colorado
I continued to take economics courses as a sideline to my main interests
in applied mathematics. The Economics Department at Colorado offered me
a fellowship to pursue a Ph.D. in economics and it was an offer I could
not refuse Upon completion of my doctorate at Colorado I was offered a
year of postdoctoral study at Yale University by James Tobin. At Yale
I developed an interest in the microeconomics foundations of ,macroeconomics,
primarily the influence of capital market imperfections such as debt limitations
on the time allocation of consumption. After that year I accepted an appointment
at Memphis State University in Tennessee, primarily because of family
ties in the area. After three years at Memphis State I spent a summer
working as a consultant at the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California
and worked as an economic consultant in San Francisco working primarily
in the area of regional economics. In 1974 I received an appointment to
the Department of Economics at San Jose State University and I have been
here ever since. I did, however have two visiting appointments. One was
at the University of Hawaii at Hilo and the other was at the University
of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.
At SJSU I have been a generalist, teaching a very wide variety of courses.
This has included macroeconomic theory, mathematical economics, urban
and regional economics, corporate finance, speculative markets, public
finance, institutional economics, cost benefit analysis, and welfare economics,
computational economics and other computer applications in economics,
a survey course on the major economics of the worlds and courses in economic
history.
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