Dec 18, 2024  
2024-2025 General Catalog 
    
2024-2025 General Catalog

Agricultural Economics & Agribusiness (Graduate Program)


 

For information regarding the UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM, click here.  

Program Overview

The Department of Agricultural Economics & Agribusiness offers a unique opportunity for graduate study. As a part of the land-grant university system, the department has joint research, teaching, and service responsibilities with the LSU Agricultural Center and LSU that enable it to address relevant issues pertaining to agriculture, economics, natural resources, and rural/community development in Louisiana, the nation, and the world. These joint research and extension components are instrumental in financially supporting the department’s MS and PhD programs, as well as in providing problem-solving research opportunities for graduate students. Graduate programs are an integral component of the department’s basic and applied research programs. The skills and research interests of the faculty provide a wide range of opportunities for graduate research projects. Interdisciplinary and regional research programs further expand the scope of research areas available to graduate students. In addition to the traditional programs in production, management, and marketing, departmental research includes agribusiness management, consumer economics, econometrics and quantitative methods, environmental and natural resource management, international marketing and trade, optimization theory, economic modeling and forecasting, price theory, and rural/community development.

Administration

P. Lynn Kennedy, Department Head
Mark J. Schafer, Director of Graduate Studies
TELEPHONE 225-578-3282
FAX 225-578-2716
WEBSITE https://www.lsu.edu/agriculture/agecon/

Admission

Applications and supporting materials for all graduate study must be submitted through the online application site for the LSU Graduate School. For detailed information how to submit official transcripts, test scores, and other materials, please refer to the information provided by the Graduate School.

Applications for admission are received and evaluated by the department throughout the year, but PhD students are typically admitted in the fall semester. Applicants must adhere to the application deadlines established by the Graduate School. In addition to meeting the general admission requirements of the Graduate School, successful applicants to both our MS and PhD programs must submit strong GRE scores and they must have an adequate background in economics or business, statistics, and calculus. An adequate background for an applicant to our MS program includes at least a basic macroeconomic and an intermediate microeconomic theory course (for a total of six hours), a course in statistics, and a calculus course.

Students pursuing the MS degree may take calculus for business and economics (or equivalent), but PhD students are encouraged to choose the traditional calculus sequence. Preference for students applying for admission to the PhD program is given to students who have completed an MS or MA. Students applying for the PhD who have not completed an MS or MA will be evaluated by the departmental graduate committee regarding initial admission to either the MS or PhD program. Students who lack adequate background may be admitted to the graduate program with the provision that the required background coursework be completed. It is not necessary to have an undergraduate degree in agricultural economics or economics to succeed in this department. Students with baccalaureate degrees in animal science, engineering, mathematics, agronomy, business administration, and various areas of liberal arts have been admitted to and successfully completed graduate degree programs in agricultural economics.

Students seeking admission must submit satisfactory credentials from previous study, acceptable GRE scores, and three letters of recommendation. An applicant whose native language is not English and/or who has been educated outside of the U.S. in a country or province where English is not the only official language must demonstrate proof of English proficiency by submitting a TOEFL iBT, an IELTS, a  PTE, a Duolingo, or a Michigan English Language score before the application is evaluated for admission. Please refer to the Graduate School’s Admission site for a list of the required scores. Regardless of test scores submitted, official scores are those reported directly to LSU by the respective testing service at the request of the student. 

Financial Assistance

Financial support is available on a competitive basis for highly qualified students. Assistantships are available through the Louisiana Agricultural Experiment Station and the College of Agriculture. Assistantships carry a waiver of non-resident tuition. To receive full consideration for admission and funding, applicants are encouraged to submit all materials by the department’s January 25 priority date. Additional details concerning availability of funds and/or applications for financial support are available from the department’s Director of Graduate Studies.

Graduate Faculty

(check current faculty listings by department here)

Naveen C. Adusumilli (7M) • Water policy, production, natural resource, and environmental economics
Maria Bampasidou (7M) • Microeconomics, agricultural finance and labor economics
Trina Biswas (3F) • International trade, agricultural trade policy, rural development
Rex H. Caffey (M) • Natural resources, wetlands, and the environment
Michael Deliberto (7M) • Crop production economics, commodity farm policy, farm management
J. Matthew Fannin (M) • Rural and community economic development
Raghav Goyal (6A) • Ag-finance (commodity derivatives), price analysis, machine learning, farm production economics
Kurt Guidry (M) • Farm management and crop production economics
Jinggang Guo (6A) • Timber and carbon market economics, climate change, bioeconomics 
Qingxiao Li (6A) • Agribusiness, consumer economics, food and agricultural economics, industrial organization
Sunghun Lim (6A) • International trade, development, global value chains, structural transformation, immigration, political economics
P. Lynn Kennedy (M) • International trade, agribusiness, policy analysis
Jerrod Penn (6A) • Natural resource and environmental economics
Michael E. Salassi (M) • Farm management and production economics
Mark J. Schafer (7M) • Sociology of education, comparative international development, and rural sociology
Hector O. Zapata (M) • Econometrics, operations research, finance, marketing, prices, international development

Programs

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