Daniel Bernhofen Professor SIS | Politics, Governance & Economics
- Degrees
- PhD, Economics, Maxwell School, Syracuse University; MS, Mathematics, Syracuse University; Diplom Wirtschafsmathematik, University of Ulm (Germany).
- Languages Spoken
- German (native); French (competent), Italian (elementary)
- Bio
- Professor Bernhofen joined the SIS faculty in the Fall of 2013 with research and teaching expertise in international economics. Prior to moving to Washington, he was Professor of International Economics and Director of the Globalisation and Economic Policy Research Centre at the University of Nottingham. Previously he taught at Clark University. He also held visiting positions at Brandeis University, Tufts University, University of Munich, University of Bordeaux, University of Tokyo and Ritsumeikan University. Bernhofen has published widely on the theoretical, empirical and historical aspects of international trade. His research has appeared in outlets such as the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Journal of Economic Perspectives and the Journal of International Economics. He is also co-editor of the Palgrave Handbook of International Trade. His research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Leverhulme Trust, the British Academy and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
- For the Media
- To request an interview for a news story, call AU Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request. Explore all AU Faculty Experts in our media guide.
Teaching
Spring 2025
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SISU-300 Intro to Int'l Economics
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SISU-320 Topics in Global Economy: International Trade Relations
Fall 2025
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SIS-665 International Trade Relations
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SISU-300 Intro to Int'l Economics
Scholarly, Creative & Professional Activities
Selected Publications
Understanding and Testing the Foundations of International Trade with Micro Data, World Scientific Studies in International Economics, World Scientific Publishing, expected date of publication May 2026.
"The impact of technological change on new tade: evidence from the container revolution (joint with Zouheir El-Sahli and Richard Kneller), 2021, Canadian Journal of Economics 54(2): 923-943.
"On the genius behind David Ricardo's 1817 formulation of comparative advantage" (joint with John C. Brown), 2018, Journal of Economic Perspectives 32(4): 227-240.
"Quantity restrictions and price adjustment of Chinese textile exports to the US" (joint with Richard Upward and Zheng Wang), 2018, The World Economy 41(11): 2983-3000.
"Testing the general validity of the Heckscher-Ohlin Theorem" (joint with John C. Brown), 2016, American Economic Journal: Microeconomics 8(4): 54-90.
“Estimating the effects of the container revolution on world trade” (joint with Zouheir El-Sahli and Richard Kneller), 2016, Journal of International Economics 98:36-50.
"Preferences, rent destruction and multilateral liberalization: The building block effect of CUSFTA (joint with Tobias Ketterer and Chris Milner), 2014, Journal of International Economics 92: 63-77.
“Multiple cones, factor price differences and the factor content of trade”, 2009, Journal of International Economics 79(2): 266-271.
“Predicting the pattern of international trade in the neoclassical trade model: a synthesis”, 2009, Economic Theory 41: 5-21.
“An empirical assessment of the comparative advantage gains from trade: evidence from Japan” (joint with John C. Brown), 2005, American Economic Review 95(1): 208-225.
“A direct test of the theory of comparative advantage: the case of Japan” (joint with John. C. Brown), 2004, Journal of Political Economy 112(1), pp. 48-67.
Research Interests
Theoretical and empirical aspects of international trade, global economic history, applied microeconomics.
Work In Progress
“Assessing market integration in the early modern period” (joint with Markus Eberhardt, Jianan Li, and Stephen Morgan), January 2025, revision requested.
“Trade and famine prevention: transnational grain markets and the end of subsistence crises” (joint with John C. Brown and Tanimoto Masayuki); paper presented at the Nov 2024 Southern Economic Association Meetings in Washington DC.
“A revealed resource savings formulation of the gains from trade” (joint with John C. Brown); paper presented at the 2024 Washington area trade symposium.
"“Formalizing and testing Hayek’s (1945) thought experiment about the market price system” (joint with John C. Brown), scheduled to present in November 2025.