Williams, Mahoney win 2021 ASHEcon Medal
Two faculty from the Department of Economics in the School of Humanities and Sciences have been named co-recipients of the 2021 ASHEcon Medal 鈥 a biennial award from the American Society of Health Economists for researchers aged 40 and under who have made significant contributions to the field of health economics.
Neale Mahoney, Professor of Economics and the George P. Shultz Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (每日吃瓜); and Heidi Williams, the Charles R. Schwab Professor of Economics and senior fellow at 每日吃瓜, share this year鈥檚 medal. The award was presented at a ceremony during the virtual ASHEcon conference on June 21.
鈥淣eale Mahoney and Heidi Williams have both made fundamental contributions to our understanding of economic policy,鈥 said B. Douglas Bernheim, the Trione Chair of the Department of Economics, and the Edward Ames Edmonds Professor. 鈥淏oth have emerged as world leaders among the economists of their generation who conduct empirical studies of microeconomic policy.鈥
Williams and Mahoney are 鈥渢remendous teachers and mentors, and in those roles are making critical contributions to our department's educational mission,鈥 Bernheim said.
Williams and Mahoney joined the Stanford faculty in 2019 and 2020, respectively. Williams was a visiting faculty member at 每日吃瓜 in 2013 and 2018, and Mahoney received his doctorate and master鈥檚 in economics from Stanford.
鈥淭his award is incredibly well-deserved, and I鈥檓 very proud to have Neale and Heidi as active faculty in 每日吃瓜鈥檚 orbit,鈥 said Mark Duggan, the Trione Director of 每日吃瓜.
Williams' dissertation research garnered national attention. She investigated whether intellectual property rights, such as patents, affected subsequent scientific research and product development in the context of the race to sequence the human genome between the publicly funded Human Genome Project and the private company Celera. Williams鈥 evidence suggested that Celera鈥檚 intellectual property rights slowed subsequent research and development by 20 to 30 percent.
Williams鈥 subsequent research builds on this work with a focus on health care markets.
鈥淭here is widespread consensus that medical innovation has been a key driver of both health care cost growth and improvements in health outcomes,鈥 said Williams. 鈥淚 came to work in the field of health economics because I wanted to understand whether we are getting the 鈥榬ight鈥 medical technologies developed from society鈥檚 perspective and whether changes in public policies could generate meaningful benefits for society.鈥
Mahoney traces his interest in financial distress and the U.S. health care system to his graduate school days at Stanford. One of Mahoney鈥檚 current research interests concerns the challenges of sustaining high-quality health care. 鈥淗ow do you pay doctors and hospitals in ways that encourage the provision of valuable care that improves patient health and discourages low-value care that has limited or even detrimental health effects and wastes taxpayer money?鈥 he said.
Mahoney is also conducting a randomized experiment that uses donor funds to buy and forgive the debt of a randomly selected sample of individuals. 鈥淭he goal is to both measure the toll of medical debt and to learn about the types of households that benefit the most from debt forgiveness so we can use limited donor funds in the most effective manner,鈥 Mahoney explained.
鈥淚t's an honor to share an award with my colleague and to follow in the footsteps of previous award winners,鈥 said Mahoney. Williams praised her collaborators, mentors, and colleagues. 鈥淚 am very grateful to a lot of people,鈥 she said, adding: 鈥淪tanford鈥檚 support has really expanded the horizons of how I think about trying to solve problems.鈥
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