Venelin Boshnakov
Institution: University of National and World Economy
Address: UNWE, Studentsky Grad
Postal Code: 1700
Country: Bulgaria
Venelin Boshnakov is an associate professor at the University of National and World Economy /UNWE/, Sofia, Bulgaria. He has acquired MSc (1994) and PhD (2005) degrees in Economics at UNWE. After working for a short period (1995-1996) in the Ministry of Economic Development as economic statistics expert he has been enrolled in a PhD program (1997) at UNWE Department of Statistics and Econometrics. He has occupied a junior faculty position at UNWE since 1998 and habilitated position since 2010.
Dr. V. Boshnakov has specialized additionally in the Central European University – Budapest, the University of Leicester, and the University of Essex (Institute for Social and Economic Research). Up to now, Dr. V. Boshnakov has participated in over 15 applied research projects focused on various issues, the main of which are: (i) international flows of production factors during market transition /international labor migration, foreign direct investment/; (ii) hidden economy in a transition country; (iii) inequality, income distribution and redistribution; tax-benefit microsimulation (EUROMOD model). He has published over 70 titles as book chapters, textbooks, journal articles, and conference papers.
Dr. V. Boshnakov has specialized additionally in the Central European University – Budapest, the University of Leicester, and the University of Essex (Institute for Social and Economic Research). Up to now, Dr. V. Boshnakov has participated in over 15 applied research projects focused on various issues, the main of which are: (i) international flows of production factors during market transition /international labor migration, foreign direct investment/; (ii) hidden economy in a transition country; (iii) inequality, income distribution and redistribution; tax-benefit microsimulation (EUROMOD model). He has published over 70 titles as book chapters, textbooks, journal articles, and conference papers.