Yong Suk Lee

Dr. Yong Suk Lee

Yong Suk Lee, PhD, MPP

  • Former SK Center Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
  • Former Deputy Director of the Korea Program at Shorenstein APARC

Biography

Yong Suk Lee was the SK Center Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and Deputy Director of the Korea Program at the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center at Stanford University. He served in these roles until June 2021.

Lee’s main fields of research are labor economics, technology and entrepreneurship, and urban economics. Some of the issues he has studied include technology and labor markets, entrepreneurship and economic growth, entrepreneurship education, and education and inequality. He is also interested in both the North and South Korean economy and has examined how economic sanctions affect economic activity in North Korea, and how management practices and education policy affect inequality in South Korea. His current research focuses on how the new wave of digital technologies, such as robotics and artificial intelligence affect labor, education, entrepreneurship, and productivity.

His research has been published in both economics and management journals including the Journal of Urban Economics, Journal of Economic Geography, Journal of Business Venturing, Journal of Health Economics, and Labour Economics. Lee also regularly contributes to policy reports and opinion pieces on contemporary issues surrounding both North and South Korea.

Prior to joining Stanford, Lee was an assistant professor of economics at Williams College in Massachusetts. He received his Ph.D. in Economics from Brown University, a Master of Public Policy from Duke University, and a Bachelor's degree and master's degree in architecture from Seoul National University. Lee also worked as a real estate development consultant and architecture designer as he transitioned from architecture to economics.

While at APARC, Dr. Lee led and participated in several research projects, including Stanford-Asia Pacific Innovation; Digital Technologies and the Labor Market; Entrepreneurship, Technology, and Economic Development; The Impact of Robotics on Nursing Home Care in Japan; Education and Development in the Digital Economy; and New Media and Political Economy.

publications

Journal Articles
November 2020

Do University Entrepreneurship Programs Promote Entrepreneurship?

Author(s)
cover link Do University Entrepreneurship Programs Promote Entrepreneurship?
Journal Articles
November 2018

Modern Management and the Demand for Technical Skill

Author(s)
cover link Modern Management and the Demand for Technical Skill
Journal Articles
September 2018

Information Technology in the Property Market

Author(s)
cover link Information Technology in the Property Market

In The News

Logo of the New South Wales Ministry of Health's podcast Future Health
News

Robotics and the Future of Work: Lessons from Nursing Homes in Japan

On the Future Health podcast, Karen Eggleston discusses the findings and implications of her collaborative research into the effects of robot adoption on staffing in Japanese nursing homes.
cover link Robotics and the Future of Work: Lessons from Nursing Homes in Japan
Autonomous caregiver robot is holding a insulin syringe, giving it to an senior adult woman, concept ambient assisted living
News

The Unfolding Relationship Between Human Workers and Robots in an Aging World

On the Freakonomics Radio podcast, Karen Eggleston and Yong Suk Lee discuss their research into the effects of robots on staffing in Japanese nursing homes.
cover link The Unfolding Relationship Between Human Workers and Robots in an Aging World