Erkin Bairam (1958 - 21 May 2001[1] ) was a Cypriot-born economist who spent most of his working life in the Department of Economics at the University of Otago, New Zealand, where he was Professor in Economics.
Born in Nicosia, Cyprus, Bairam first studied at the University of Essex in Colchester, England, where he gained a BA (Hons) in Economics in 1980. He left Essex for the University of Hull, where he was awarded an MA in Econometrics in 1982. He then began work on his PhD thesis entitled "Returns to Scale, Technical Progress and Industrial Growth in the USSR and Eastern Europe: An Empirical Study, 1961-75", with John McCombie as his supervisor. He was awarded his doctorate in 1986 and the following year was appointed as a lecturer at the University of Otago. By 1991, after only four years and at the age of 33, he had risen to the rank of full professor, becoming one of the youngest full professors to be appointed in New Zealand.
Bairam died in Dunedin on 21 May 2001 at the age of 43. At the time of his death, he had published over 60 articles and 4 books.[2]
Bairam had two main research interests: the theoretical specification and estimation of aggregate production functions, and the testing of Thirlwall's Law of economic growth.
But his interests went wider than this. He was a gifted applied econometrician and made contributions to econometric theory and also published in the areas of inflation and labour economics. Although he would have been the first to admit that he was not a natural sportsman, he also developed an interest in the economics of sport, especially cricket, and published some innovative papers in this area.
Bairam undertook some notable work in calculating the research rankings of economics departments (always a contentious issue), with an article being published in the prestigious Journal of Economic Literature (Bairam, 1994a).[2]