Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jebaraj to head business research

- JAIME ADAME

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Mervin Jebaraj has been named director of a business research center at the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le at a time of relative economic growth for the state.

But Jebaraj, 32, said there are areas that still are hurting.

A long-term goal for

UA’s Center for Business and Economic Research will be to provide analysis and reports tailored to the needs of those not experienci­ng growth like Northwest Arkansas, he said.

“We can more proactivel­y work with communitie­s across the state, especially in communitie­s that haven’t done as well economical­ly,” Jebaraj said.

He takes over Jan. 1 as director of the center after serving as interim leader since April.

Jebaraj, a citizen of India who grew up in Dubai, first arrived in Fayettevil­le on a student visa.

As an undergradu­ate, he arrived at UA focused on studying internatio­nal relations. He said he took an economics course and “realized that I liked economics a whole lot, as much as I did internatio­nal relations.”

Jebaraj, now a U.S. citizen, said he views economics as a set of tools to help with developmen­t.

“I’m thinking broad-based economic developmen­t, that raises the standard of living for the majority of people in a region or an area,” Jebaraj said. Results from such developmen­t include “higher incomes, better schooling, better health outcomes,” he said.

Jebaraj earned a bachelor’s degree in economics and internatio­nal relations from UA in 2007, the same year he started working at the economics research center.

“This was exactly the kind of work that I was interested in doing,” he said.

The center, a part of UA’s Sam M. Walton College of Business, dates back to 1943, according to the university. It provides frequent reports on economic conditions in the region and state, working with clients that include the Northwest Arkansas Council, a nonprofit group that has worked to improve regional infrastruc­ture and elevate workforce skills.

Jebaraj earned a master’s of public administra­tion degree from UA in 2011 and served as the center’s assistant director before stepping in after the departure of Kathy Deck, the center’s previous director. Deck and her husband, Cary, formerly a UA economics professor, accepted jobs with the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa.

Jebaraj was named director after a national search. He will earn a yearly salary of $85,000 in his new role; he earned $71,000 as interim director, according to UA. Deck earned $99,099 at the time she left the center.

Arkansas recently ranked 14th among all states when it comes to percentage increases in gross domestic product for the second quarter of this year, with GDP increasing by 3.5 percent, according to the data made available in November by the U.S. Department of Commerce. The state’s GDP was $126.6 billion, about 0.7 percent of the nation’s total GDP.

“Most of the state is doing a whole lot better, especially in the last few years, as the national economy continues to grow,” Jebaraj said.

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