Herbert G. Grubel Award

The Herbert G. Grubel Award is given to the graduating MA student with the highest cumulative grade point average (CGPA) obtained in the MA required courses during the preceding Fall and Spring terms. This award is named after Herbert Grubel, emeritus professor at Simon Fraser University and Senior Fellow at The Fraser Institute.

2024 - Oskar Escobar Sossa

I joined SFU in the Fall of 2023, my love for Economics arose from my interest in areas like Mathematics and Physics during high school, but I was looking for an applied area with a focus on social issues, I also have a passion for markets analysis. The combination of all these topics is what makes me enjoy Economics. I have special interest on Microeconomics because I like the analysis behind decision making and modeling these processes in a simple but elegant way.

Before joining SFU, I earned my Bachelor's degree in Economics from Universidad Católica Boliviana 'San Pablo', I also worked as a research assistant with very talented economist in Bolivia before joining the Institute of Social Sciences at the University of Tokyo, and then moving to Canada.

Among my research interests are applied microeconomics, environmental economics and industrial organization. 

Once I finish my studies at SFU I look forward to exploring diverse areas of work and joining a PhD program in the future. 

Past winners

About the Donor 

Herbert G. Grubel is Professor of Economics (Emeritus) at Simon Fraser University and Senior Fellow at The Fraser Institute in Vancouver, BC, Canada.

He has a B.A. from Rutgers University (1958) and a Ph.D. in economics from Yale University (1963). He has taught full-time at Stanford University, the University of Chicago, and the University of Pennsylvania; and has had temporary appointments at universities in Berlin, Singapore, Cape Town, Nairobi, Oxford, Canberra and Bologna.

Herbert Grubel was the Reform Party Member of Parliament in Ottawa for Capilano-Howe Sound from 1993 to 1997, serving as the Finance Critic from 1995 to 1997.

He has published 27 books and more than 130 professional articles in economics, dealing with international trade and finance and a wide range of economic policy issues.  His recent research interests include the economics of monetary union and the economics and politics of Canadian immigration.