Top students recognized
Posted by Melt van Schoor on 2016-04-12
The Department recently recognized its top students for the 2015 academic year by awarding a number of prizes at a recently held function. The winners are:
First year Economics: Bruwer Ackermann (First) and Lyle Ressouw (Second)
Second year Economics: Connor Mc Cann (First) and Willem Wilken (Second)
Third year Economics: John Roelofse (First) and Dylon Botha (Second)
Honnours, both in first place: Christiaan Bothma and David Stephens (pictured above with Prof Andrie Schoombee)
Masters: Michael Ball (First) and Allan Davids (Second)
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Monday 04 August 202512:00-13:00
Prof Willem Boshoff: Stellenbosch University
Topic: "Two competing approaches in South African competition policy: merger control and anti-cartel enforcement over the past 30 years"
12:00-13:00
Professor Johan Fourie: Stellenbosch University
Topic: "Economic History: TBC"
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Dr Stephen Taylor: Director In Education & Research Fellow Stellenbosch
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BER Weekly
25 Jul 2025 Budget hurdle cleared, but US tariff implementation remains a riskIt was another big week on the local political front, but with some constructive momentum. On the trade front, ahead of next week’s 1 August deadline, Trump announced another “massive” trade deal with Japan. The upcoming week is busy, with a slew of global and domestic data releases and several monetary policy decisions, including the SARB....
Read the full issue
Upcoming Seminars
Monday 04 August 202512:00-13:00
Prof Willem Boshoff: Stellenbosch University
Topic: "Two competing approaches in South African competition policy: merger control and anti-cartel enforcement over the past 30 years"
12:00-13:00
Professor Johan Fourie: Stellenbosch University
Topic: "Economic History: TBC"
12:00-13:00
Dr Stephen Taylor: Director In Education & Research Fellow Stellenbosch
Topic: "TBC"
BER Weekly
25 Jul 2025 Budget hurdle cleared, but US tariff implementation remains a riskIt was another big week on the local political front, but with some constructive momentum. On the trade front, ahead of next week’s 1 August deadline, Trump announced another “massive” trade deal with Japan. The upcoming week is busy, with a slew of global and domestic data releases and several monetary policy decisions, including the SARB....
Read the full issue