Lead
Economist (Trade Policy), Development Research Group, World Bank,
2004-present (on leave from Adelaide)
Professor
of Economics, University of Adelaide, 1991-present; Senior Lecturer,
1986-90; Lecturer, 1984-85; Executive Director, Centre for International
Economic Studies, 1989-2003
Counsellor
and deputy to Director of Economic Research, GATT (now WTO) Secretariat,
Geneva, 1990-92 (on leave from Adelaide)
Research
Fellow in Economics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies,
Australian National University, 1977-83
Agricultural
Economist, South Australian Department of Agriculture, Adelaide,
1971-74
PhD
1977, MA 1976, Stanford University
MA
1975, University of Chicago
MEc
1974, University of Adelaide
BAgEc(Hons)
1971, University of New England
Dispute
Settlement Panelist, World Trade Organization
Distinguished
Fellow of the Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society
Fellow
of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia
Fellow
of the Australian Institute of Company Directors
Research
Fellow of Europe's Centre for Economic Policy Research
President
of the Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society,
1996-97
Kym
Anderson has contributed to agricultural economics
not only as the author of path-breaking and widely cited books
and articles but also in his professional practice, which has
had a direct influence on national and international economic
policies. Having grown up in the humble surroundings of rural
South Australia, and despite being based in the antipodes during
most of his professional career (at the Australian National University
and then the University of Adelaide, following graduate studies
at Chicago and Stanford), he has maintained contact with the profession
through a range of affiliations with universities and research
networks on both side of the Atlantic, by serving on the editorial
boards or as associate editor of numerous journals, and by spending
extended periods of leave in the research divisions of international
agencies such as the GATT Secretariat and World Bank (where he
is currently). He is acknowledged as one of the world's leading
authorities on the changing extent, causes and effects of distortions
to agricultural trade as economies grow, and of the role the WTO
rules-based global trading system can play in reducing that 'disarray'
(as his mentor, the late D. Gale Johnson, aptly described it).