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Join the Institute for the Study of Free Enterprise for the event "Can China Avoid the Middle Income Trap and Thucydidus Trap? Assessment After the US-China Trade Conflicts" with Keun Lee on March 11th

Keun Lee is a leading expert on technological progress and economic development. Professor Lee will share his insights regarding the United States and China trade relations.

The event is free and open to the public. Due to COVID-19 regulations, the event will be held virtually. Please join us via Zoom from 6:00pm to 7:30pm. CLICK HERE to register and receive a reminder with the direct Zoom link on March 11th

Keun Lee: Can China Avoid the Middle Income Trap and Thucydidus Trap? Assessment After the US-China Trade Conflicts Flyer

Keun Lee is the Vice-chairman of the National Economic Advisory Council, which is a key advisory position for the President of Korea (Chairman of the Council). He is also a Professor of Economics at the Seoul National University (SNU), and Head of the Center for Comparative Economic Studies at SNU. He is also a Fellow of the CIFAR (Canada) program on Innovation, Equity and The Future of Prosperity, and founding director of the Center for Economic Catch-up.

He is the winner of the 2014 Schumpeter Prize for his monograph on Schumpeterian Analysis of Economic Catch-up (2013 Cambridge Univ. Press), as well as the 2019 Kapp Prize from the EAEPE, for his article on national innovation systems. He is also an editor of Research Policy, and an associate editor of Industrial and Corporate Change. He served as the President of the International Schumpeter Society (2016-18), a member of the Committee for Development Policy of UN (2013-18), a council member of the World Economic Forum (2016-19).and the President of the Korean International Economic Association (2020).

He obtained a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley. One of his most cited articles is a paper on Korea’s Technological Catch-up published in Research Policy, with 1,350 citations (Google Scholar). His H-index is 45, with about 115 papers with more than 10 citations. He has a new book, China’s Technological Leapfrogging and Economic Catch-up, forthcoming from Oxford Univ. Press (2021).