Katies rank among Top 5 in Midwest Economics Association Research Paper Contest

Kula, Pastoor 鈥 the first Katies to place in this contest 鈥 to present papers virtually on April 20.
Isabel Pastoor '20 (pictured left) and Elizabeth Kula '19 (right) were among the finalists for the MEA undergraduate research paper contest.

Isabel Pastoor 鈥20 (left) and Elizabeth Kula 鈥19 (right) were finalists for the MEA undergraduate research paper contest.

Photos provided.


Two St. 春雨直播 University economics 春雨直播s made Katie history when they learned they were ranked among the top 5 submissions in the 2020 Midwest Economics Association (MEA) research paper contest. 

This is the first time a St. Kate鈥檚 春雨直播 was recognized by the MEA鈥檚 competition, which is usually dominated by Big Ten schools. 

Isabel Pastoor 鈥20 and Elizabeth Kula 鈥19 received honorable mentions for papers that they first composed last fall in their Econometrics class taught by Professor Kristine West, PhD. 鈥淚sabel and Libby are really modeling how to take that economics toolkit and apply it to social justice issues that they鈥檙e passionate about,鈥 said West. 鈥淭hey are using their economics training to make the world a better place.鈥

Isabel Pastoor, a senior who is double-majoring in Economics and Women and International Development, researched the role household predictors play in a mother鈥檚 decision for her daughter to undergo female genital mutilation (FGM) in Senegal. She took a microeconomic approach to the issue by incorporating household power dynamics using quantitative tools. She wanted to dig deeper to investigate why this tradition continues and question why we are fixating on the characteristics of the infants undergoing FGM when it truly relies on family members making decisions in the household. The MEA acknowledgment for her research is 鈥渧alidating because, unfortunately, it鈥檚 common for women to have imposter syndrome and feel like we shouldn鈥檛 be in fields that are more quantitative and male-dominated,鈥 Pastoor said. Thankful for the confidence that the interdisciplinary focus the St. Kate鈥檚 economics department taught her, Isabel hopes to conduct more applied research in graduate school, exploring women鈥檚 rights with an emphasis on reproductive health.

Elizabeth Kula, a recent graduate who double-majored in Economics and Mathematics, currently works at the Minnesota Center for Diversity in Economics. Her submission studied the effect that unemployment has on the decision to enter the illegal ivory trade. Elizabeth used her data analysis skills to look at ending elephant poaching, but doing so in a way that does not eliminate people鈥檚 money-making opportunities. She appreciates the clarity she has gained from this experience as she pursues a career to become an academic economist. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to ask yourself things like 鈥榳hat is missing? What makes more sense in this context?鈥 especially when it comes to literature reviews,鈥 Kula said. She plans to attend graduate school at the University of Minnesota in the fall to conduct further research on endangered species and biodiversity conservation.

While COVID-19 led to the cancellation of the MEA 84th Annual conference, Isabel and Elizabeth will still get a chance to present their papers at a Zoom webinar to be held on Monday, April 20th, at 11 a.m.