Bard MBA

Our People

The Bard MBA faculty reflects the broad diversity and extraordinary talent of sustainability-focused leaders in the New York City region and beyond. In addition to the permanent faculty at Bard, the weekend intensive structure of the program supports a remarkable set of cutting-edge practitioners as program faculty. Some of our faculty teach full time; some share their expertise for set modules. Guest lectures and case presentations are a prominent feature of the program. Experienced business leaders also support the program on the MBA Advisory Board.

Ajit Zacharias

Research Scholar, Levy Economics Institute of Bard College

Ajit Zacharias Ph.D. (Social Research), The New School University; M.A., University of Bombay. Zacharias’s research interests include concepts and measurement of economic well-being, effects of taxes and government spending on well-being, valuation of noncash transfers, and time use. He, along with other Levy scholars, developed the Levy Institute Measure of Economic Well-Being (LIMEW), and utilizes the measure in tracking trends in economic inequality and well-being in the United States. The LIMEW is an alternative measure that can provide the foundation for a comprehensive view of the level and distribution of economic well-being. Zacharias is currently co-directing two research projects. The first is aimed at developing comparable measures of economic well-being in four other member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), all with widely varying political-economic systems. An effort to develop poverty thresholds that incorporate household production in three Latin American countries is the main task of the second project. His recent publications include “Do Gender Disparities in Employment Increase Profitability? Evidence from the United States” (with M. Mahoney), Feminist Economics, July 2009; “Household Wealth and the Measurement of Economic Well-Being in the United States” (with E. N. Wolff), Journal of Economic Inequality, June 2009; and “A New Look at the Economic Well-Being of the Elderly in the United States, 1989–2001” (with E. N. Wolff), Journal of Income Distribution, March 2009.