Nina Smith

Nina Smith

Profile

 

Professor
MSc (Econ), Aarhus University, 1981

 

Secretary: Susan Stilling

 

Nina Smith is professor at the School of Economics and Management. She graduated from Aarhus University 1981 (MSc Economics). She has been professor at Aarhus School of Business and pro vice-chancellor at Aarhus University. Her primary research interest is labour economics, migration and education economics. She has been chairman of the board of the Danish Independent Research Councils, member of the Danish Social Science Research Council, and served as member or chairman of a number of boards of directors of national research institutes and private firms. She has been chairman of the Danish Economic Council and member of several government commissions and councils

   
Research Interests

  • Labour Supply and Taxation
  • Family friendly policies and women’s career
  • Intergenerational Mobility and educational attainment
  • Integration of Immigrants into the Labour Market
  • Allocation of time within the household
  • Women in top management and firm performance
  • Education economics and research policy

 

Selected Publications

  • N. Smith;  S. Dex, T. Callan and J. D. Vlasblom, 2003, Taxation of Spouses: A Cross Country Study of the Effects on Married Women’s Labour Supply, Oxford Economic papers, 55(3), 417-439.
  • A. Frederiksen, Graversen E.K. and N. Smith, 2005, Tax Evasion and Work in the Regular and Underground Sector, Labour Economics, 12(5), 613-628.
  • N. Datta Gupta, R. Oaxaca and N. Smith 2006, Swimming Upstream, Floating Downstream: Comparing Women’s Relative Wage Progress in the United States and Denmark, Industrial and Labor Relations, 59 (2), 243-66.
  • N. Gupta, N. Smith and L. Stratton, 2007, Is Marriage Poisonous? Are Relationships Taxing? An Analysis of the Male Marital Wage Differential in Denmark, Southern Economic Journal, vol 74 (2), 412-433.
  • P.J. Pedersen, M. Pytlikova and N. Smith, 2008, Selection and network effects – Migrations flows into OECD countries 1990-2000, European Economic Review, 52 (7), 1160-86.
  • H.S. Nielsen, N. Smith, and A, Celikaksoy, 2009, The effect of marriage on education of immigrants: Evidence from a policy reform restricting marriage migration, Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 111(3), 457-486.

 

 

Curriculum Vitae

Curriculum Vitae (in Danish)

Publication list

 

 

View all (202) »

ID: 32282576

Find Department of Economics and Business

Show detailed map

Contact information

Aarhus University
Department of Economics and Business

Fuglesangs Allé 4
DK-8210 Aarhus V

Bartholins Allé 10
Building 1322, 3rd floor
DK-8000 Aarhus C

Frichshuset
Hermodsvej 22, 1st and 2nd floor
DK-8230 Åbyhøj

Tåsingegade 1
DK-8000 Aarhus C

E-mail: oekonomi@au.dk
Tel.: +45 8716 5515

CVR no: 31119103
P no: 1013125046
EAN no: 5798000419483
Budget code: 31111

Are you a student at Department of Economics and Business?

Students

Are you an employee at Department of Economics and Business?

econ.medarbejdere.au.dk

New main academic area

### UNIT NAME ### is part of Business and Social Sciences, which is accredited by EQUIS (European Quality Improvement System).

What does Business and Social Sciences comprise?

As part of the academic development process at Aarhus University, the Aarhus School of Business (ASB) and the Faculty of Social Sciences (SAM) merged to become the new main academic area called Business and Social Sciences.

You can still go to www.asb.dk/en (ASB) and samfundsvidenskab.au.dk/en (SAM), but these websites will be closing soon.

Here you can find Business and Social Sciences

Show detailed map

New times at au.dk/en

The university’s website is being redesigned. The design and content will therefore change, and you may experience for a while that old and new sections are mixed together, and that the content is not in its usual place.

We hope that the new website will make up for any inconvenience, and that you will enjoy greater coherence throughout and find the website simpler to use.

Why are we making a mess?

In the time ahead, you will notice a mixture of old and new designs in the pages on the website.

In spring 2011, Aarhus University’s nine main academic areas were reduced to four, and the fifty-five departments became twenty-six. This was to unify the organisation and to strengthen the university’s interdisciplinary approach. We are now following suit by restructuring the entire website to ensure more coherence in the content and design.

Such an exercise takes time – and we hope you will bear with us!

Take a short cut

Under the HOT KEY at the top right, you can find links to the most frequently used content on the website, as well as the two new universes for staff and students.

Where can I find it?

Use the new mega dropdowns to get an overview of the website’s content. They open when you run your mouse over the navigation at the top.

Aarhus University
Nordre Ringgade 1
DK-8000 Aarhus C

Email: au@au.dk
Tel: +45 8715 0000
Fax: +45 8715 0201

CVR no: 31119103

AU on social media
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter
Vimeo