Assistant Professor of Economics Theodore Papageorgiou has been named the inaugural holder of the Felter Family Assistant Professorship, a faculty appointment established in honor of retired Professor of Economics Richard W. Tresch.

The professorship is the result of a gift from John Kenneth Felter 鈥72, M.A. 鈥72, in recognition of the role Tresch played in his life and the lives of thousands of other economics majors he taught during a 49-year career at Boston College.

Theodore Papageorgiou

Theodore Papageorgiou

聽鈥淚 am humbled to join the growing group of endowed chairs at Boston College who, to me, represent the absolute highest level of scholarship and service to this community,鈥 said Papageorgiou, whose scholarship focuses on labor economics, international trade, and macroeconomics. 鈥淭his recognition means a great deal to me, especially since I鈥檓 the inaugural holder of this chair.鈥

Papageorgiou joined Boston College in 2019 after teaching at McGill University for four years. He earned a doctorate in economics at Yale University. Since joining 精东影业, he has taught Macroeconomic Theory to undergraduates and Labor Economics to graduate students.

聽鈥淢y current research focuses on both labor economics, as well as transportation economics,鈥 said Papageorgiou. 鈥淢y research in labor economics currently focuses on better understanding the process through which workers and employers meet each other and how this process changes over the business cycle. With respect to transportation economics, I study oceanic shipping and delve into the fundamental question of understanding the role of transportation markets in international trade.鈥

The professorship expands on Felter鈥檚 philanthropic support for the Economics Department and the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences. He has already established the Felter Family Endowed Faculty Fellowship and the Felter Family Economics Department Doctoral Fellowship.

To this day, Felter said, Tresch鈥檚 teaching, mentorship, and ongoing friendship continue to influence his life and work as an attorney and teacher. Retired from the Boston firm Ropes & Gray, Felter has taught at Harvard University and last fall offered the course Cross Currents: Thinking about Law and Economics (and Psychology) at 精东影业.

鈥淲hat I found so interesting about his Principles of Economics class was not only the substantive subject matter, but also Dick鈥檚 teaching style,鈥 said Felter. 鈥淗e was a master of the Socratic method. He challenged students to apply economic theory to real-world situations. After taking that class, I switched my major to economics. I was also fortunate to take Dick鈥檚 graduate Public Finance course and he agreed to supervise my Scholar of the College independent study. So, I took full advantage of 聽opportunities to learn from the master.鈥

Tresch, beloved by his students and the 1996 Massachusetts Professor of the Year, retired in 2018. A citation from Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker at the time acknowledged Tresch as a 鈥減reeminent teacher, stalwart administrator, contributor to the social science of economics, an esteemed author, and public-sector theorist.鈥

Boston College鈥檚 endowed assistant professorships support early-career faculty with additional funds for research and professional development.

The Felter professorship supports an assistant professor with demonstrated excellent teaching skills within the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences, with a preference for a faculty member in the Economics Department.

鈥淲e are grateful for Ken鈥檚 ongoing support of the Morrissey College as an alumnus, philanthropist, and teacher,鈥 Morrissey College Dean Gregory Kalscheur, S.J., said. 鈥淭he Felter Family Assistant Professorship is essential to fostering the kind of world-class teaching and research in which our faculty take great pride. It is fitting recognition for Theo Papageorgiou鈥檚 accomplished scholarship and our Economics Department.鈥

Ed Hayward | University Communications | March 2022
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