Justin McCrary

Visiting Fellow

Biography

Justin McCrary is a visiting fellow at the Civitas Institute where he focuses on antitrust, financial markets, and statistical methodologies, among other topics. He also has an appointment at the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) School of Law, and is a professor at the School of Civic Leadership also at UT Austin.

An economist by training, Justin McCrary has been teaching in law schools since 2008 when he joined the UC Berkeley faculty. While at Berkeley, he directed the Social Sciences Data Laboratory, which focused on training graduate students in high performance computing and statistical techniques. Prior to Berkeley, he was on the University of Michigan faculty in the policy school and the economics department. He most recently has been on the Columbia faculty, where his teaching portfolio centers around antitrust. Of evident ecumenical scholarly tastes, Professor McCrary's academic work spans statistical methodologies, antitrust, financial markets, criminal justice, fertility choices, and monetary policy, among other topics. For a dozen years, he co-directed the Crime Working Group of the National Bureau of Economic Research, where he remains a Faculty Research Associate. Over the years, his academic work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Arnold Foundation.

He has a Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley and an A.B. from Princeton University.

Recent contributions
No items found.
View all
Latest from

Justin McCrary

No items found.
Show more
No items found.
Show more
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.
Civitas Outlook
The Reign of the Greenback

The dollar is the world's overwhelmingly dominant currency, but suffers from endemic consumer price inflation and recurring asset price inflation.

Civitas Outlook
Why Reagan Crushed the PATCO Strike

A new book demonstrates why Reagan made the decision he did and, in doing so, helps advance the current-day understanding of why Reagan was such a successful president.

Join the newsletter

Get the Civitas Outlook daily digest, plus new research and events.

Subscribe
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Ideas for
Prosperity

Tomorrow’s leaders need better, bolder ideas about how to make our society freer and more prosperous. That’s why the Civitas Institute exists, plain and simple.
Discover more at Civitas