Dr. Yanling Wang
Associate Dean, Equity Diversity and Inclusion; Full Professor
- PhD in Economics, Georgetown University; MA in Economics, Georgetown University and Renmin University of China; BA in Economics, Renmin University of China
- D387A Loeb Building, 杏吧原创 University
- 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, ON, K1S 5B6
- Email Dr. Yanling Wang
Professor Wang joined the NPSIA faculty in July 2003 as Assistant Professor of International Affairs after obtaining her PhD in Economics at Georgetown University. She worked at the World Bank as a consultant from 2001 to 2003 while being a PhD candidate, and as a researcher in the State Economic & Trade Commission, P.R. China from 1995 to 1997, after obtaining her MA in Economics from Renmin University of China.
At 杏吧原创, she was tenured in 2007, promoted to Associate Professor in 2008, and to Full Professor in 2015.
She served as NPSIA鈥檚 Associate Director (PhD Program) from 2019 to 2023.
She currently serves as Associate Dean, Equity and Inclusion, at the Faculty of Public and Global Affairs (FPGA).
Professor Wang also served as President for Canadian Women Economists Network (CWEN) (2008鈥2009), President for the Chinese Economists Society (CES) (2010鈥2011), the Chair of Regent for the Chinese Economists Society (2012), and an executive committee member for Canadian Women Economists Committee (CWEC) (2018-2021).
Overall Research Focus/Expertise
Professor Wang鈥檚 research focuses on empirical analyses of international trade and foreign direct investment (FDI) at both the macro and micro levels. Her work spans a wide range of topics within these two areas.
Her PhD dissertation examined the effects of imports from developed countries on productivity in developing countries, arguing that imports embed the technologies of the producing countries.
Using Canadian plant-level data, she has analyzed various effects of FDI on manufacturing plants, from productivity to survival, with particular attention to FDI鈥檚 overall impacts鈥攚ithin-industry effects as well as upstream and downstream linkages.
Since 2013, Professor Wang has also studied the expansion of Chinese firms in international trade and the effects of FDI in China, with a focus on ownership structures鈥攕tate-owned, privately-owned, and foreign-owned firms. In particular, she has investigated how China鈥檚 policy changes and evolving operating environment have influenced foreign investors鈥 consolidation of equity shares in joint ventures.
Her findings have been published in peer-reviewed journals including the Canadian Journal of Economics, Economic Inquiry, Review of International Economics, China Economic Review, Journal of Development Studies, Contemporary Economic Policy, and the International Journal of the Economics of Business, among others.
Current Projects
Professor Wang currently is working on two projects.
She examines whether and how Canadian firms have been utilizing Canada鈥檚 free trade agreements in forming their global value chains.
Using World Bank鈥檚 Business Climate Survey for China, she studies Chinese firms鈥 trade dynamics amid global protectionism.
Recent Publications
- 鈥淪ervice sector liberalization and firms鈥 carbon emission intensity reduction: Evidence from China鈥 (with Jiaxuan Gao and Hongjun Xie), 99 (2025) Article #101956. Journal of Asian Economics. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asieco.2025.101956
- 鈥淣orth-South Trade-related Technology Diffusion and the East Asia-Latin America Productivity Gap鈥 (with Maurice Schiff), 22(3-4): 348-358, 2023. World Trade Review.
- 鈥淐hinese Firms鈥 Export Dynamics: Experimental but Promising鈥 (with Wei Wei), 12:1: 10-23, 2020. Transnational Economic Review.
- 鈥淎 Push Over Trade Barriers: Firms鈥 Access to External Finance and Their Sales Hierarchy鈥 (with Ninghua Ye), 52(6): 464-487, 2019. The Chinese Economy.
- 鈥淔rom Honeymoon to Divorce: Institution Quality and Foreign Investors鈥 Ownership Consolidation in China鈥 (with Qun Bao and Hongjun Xie). 57(1): 372-390, 2019. Economic Inquiry.
Willing to support students in the following areas of research
Professor Wang will be happy to support students in their research to examine empirical issues of international trade and FDI, particularly with a strong econometric foundation.