Edward M. Feasel, PhD

Vice President for Academic Affairs, Chief Academic Officer, Professor of Economics Soka University

  • Aliso Viejo CA

Professor Feasel is responsible for academic affairs at Soka University.

Contact

Soka University

View more experts managed by Soka University

Biography

Dr. Feasel is a founding faculty member of Soka University. Joining the team in 1998 as Dean of Students, he played an instrumental role in developing the outline for the undergraduate curriculum including general education courses and requirements, concentration requirements, and electives. Dr. Feasel served as Dean of Faculty at Soka from 2005 to 2017, where he oversaw an annual budget of $9 million and a staff of 46 full-time and 25 part-time faculty members. In 2015, Dr. Feasel became Chief Academic Officer and Vice President for Academic Affairs.

Dr. Feasel has an academic background in Economics and has continued lecturing on the topic since 1991.

Areas of Expertise

Academic Administration
Economics
Orange County Economy
Foreign aid, international trade and foreign direct investment
Economic outcomes and societal values
Economic Growth
Foreign Aid

Accomplishments

American Council on Education (ACE) Institute for New Chief Academic Officers (CAOs)

Class of 2017-2018

Best Conference Paper

2011
Micro and Macro Economics GSTF Conference, Singapore

Soka Gakkai Award

2007
Daisaku Ikeda Medal

Education

Yale University

B.A.

University of California at Berkeley

Ph.D.

Affiliations

  • American Economic Review
  • Applied Economics
  • Contemporary Economic Policy
  • Economic Systems
  • Eastern Economic Journal
Show All +

Articles

On the Relative Importance of Demand and Supply Shocks: a Panel VAR Study for US States

Applied Economics Letters

EM Feasel, P Gollapudi, D Kumazawa

2017
This article is a panel VAR study of demand and supply shocks in the USA using state-level data where structural shocks are decomposed into state idiosyncratic and common components. Decomposition suggests that in all instances, idiosyncratic state shocks rather than common shocks have larger impact and explain most variation in both the state-level unemployment rate and real gross state product. Further, demand shocks are the primary driving force in unemployment rate fluctuations, while both demand and supply are important in output movements to varying degree of impact and importance depending on the use of quarterly or annual data.

View more

Sentiment toward Trading Partners and International Trade

Eastern Economic Journal

Edward M FeaselNobuyuki Kanazawa

2013
This paper utilizes panel VAR analysis to investigate the relationship between the sentiment of Japanese citizens toward their trading partners and the flow of trade. Using a system GMM approach, short- and long-run restrictions are applied in a panel VAR setting for the first time to identify structural shocks to sentiment, imports, exports, and the exchange rate. Results show that people's collective psychological workings and trade patterns are interrelated. Evidence of a strong asymmetric relationship between imports and sentiment is found: increases in sentiment lead to higher imports, but a positive shock to imports causes significant drops in sentiment.

View more

Understanding Subjective Well-Being across Countries: Economic, Cultural, and Institutional Factors

International Review of Social Sciences and Humanities

Edward M. Feasel

2013
The paper examines factors affecting subjective well-being across 58 countries. At the individual level, higher income and education, being female, married, and a housewife are all strongly associated with higher subjective well-being. Negative effects were observed for those who are unemployed and older. Macro variables in six categories were also examined: economic, freedom, religion, legal origin, fractionalization, and “other”. The results give evidence of the importance of cultural and institutional variables, in addition to economic ones, for understanding variation in subjective well-being. Significant differences in how the variables affect well-being across low and high income countries were also observed.

View more

Show All +