Sebastian Sotelo
Associate Professor of Economics, University of Michigan
Sebastian Sotelo is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Michigan. His research studies the mechanisms through which technological change and improved trade opportunities shape people’s lives, ranging from how domestic trade costs and remoteness impinge on farmers’ productivity and welfare, to how information and communication technologies have transformed the workplace and the distribution of income.
Recent work by Sebastian Sotelo
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Migration, knowledge, and comparative advantage: How Brazil’s March to the West transformed long-term trade patterns
Evidence from Brazil suggests that the crop-specific knowledge of domestic migrant farmers, during a period of large-scale migration, was a key driver of the recent transformation of the country’s export patterns – highlighting the importance of migr...
Published 04.11.25