NTA Equity and Inclusion Travel Fellowship

Advance Your Career with the NTA Equity and Inclusion Travel Fellowship

The National Tax Association (NTA) is pleased to announce the “NTA Equity and Inclusion Travel Fellowship,” targeted toward graduate students and early career scholars who have overcome significant barriers on their path towards a career in tax or public finance. This scholarship is designed to support the participation of graduate students and other new scholars who have traditionally not participated in the National Tax Association conference, including underrepresented students and others who haven’t historically attended our meetings.

This fellowship provides significant financial assistance to those engaged in the theory and practice of public finance, including public taxation, spending, and borrowing.

2025 NTA Equity and Inclusion Travel Fellows

Fernanda Alfaro-Gonzalez

Fernanda Alfaro-Gonzalez is a PhD Candidate in Agricultural, Food, and Resource Economics at Michigan State University. Her research centers on public finance, taxation, and regional development. She has collaborated with organizations such as the Inter-American Development Bank and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. Her work has appeared in leading journals such as the National Tax Journal and the Journal of Regional Science. Her dissertation, Essays on Price Adjustment and Spatial Equilibrium in the United States, investigates the spatial dynamics of prices and their implications for regional economies.

Maria Ines Badin

Maria Ines Badin is a PhD candidate in Economics at the University of California, Davis, specializing in public economics and development. Her research examines how governments can optimally deliver social protection to vulnerable populations, particularly in developing settings characterized by capacity constraints and limited income verifiability. A complementary line of work studies how politicians’ preferences, beliefs, and networks shape policy priorities and the implementation of tax policies. She holds an MS in Applied Economics from Johns Hopkins University and a BA in Economics from the University of Tucuman. Before her PhD, she worked at the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank.

Sakshi Bhardwaj

Sakshi Bhardwaj is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. She completed her Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2024. She is an applied microeconomist with research interests in public economics and labor economics. Her research focuses on understanding the impact of programs that support low-income families and improve economic opportunities for underprivileged individuals.

Tejendra P. Singh

Tejendra P. Singh is a fifth-year Ph.D. candidate at Georgia State University. Almost all of his work utilizes novel data sources, such as text and satellite imagery data, to generate insights of direct policy relevance. He has two research agendas. His first research agenda is at the intersection of labor and environmental economics. The constant theme in these works is the use of natural experiments generated by environmental shocks to examine their effect on outcomes such as defaults on legal financial obligations arising out of low-level traffic violations, leading to defendants getting entangled in the wider US criminal justice system, the effects of which are not equally distributed and are highly costly both economically and socially. Other works in this research agenda have examined, for instance, how people allocate their time between indoor and outdoor activities on very polluted days. His second research agenda in health economics has a consistent theme regarding the role of spatial access to healthcare facilities in driving outcomes.