Osman Gulseven

Academic portfolio of Prof. Osman Gulseven, Associate Professor of Economics and WTO Chair at Sultan Qaboos University, focused on international trade, applied econometrics, food security, finance, and policy analytics.
Author

Osman Gulseven

Keywords

Osman Gulseven, Sultan Qaboos University, WTO Chair, international trade, applied econometrics, food security, Oman, GCC, gravity model, PPML, TINA trade simulations, R, Python, ScholarDoc, ScholarTeX

Trade, finance, econometrics, and policy analytics

Prof. Osman Gulseven connects academic research, applied econometrics, WTO-related policy work, teaching innovation, and digital research infrastructure at Sultan Qaboos University.

His work focuses on how international trade, finance, food security, price transmission, sustainability, and data-driven policy analysis intersect in Oman, the GCC, Türkiye, and emerging markets, with computational teaching materials in R, Python, Google Colab, and Quarto.

Research Publications WTO Chair Teaching Data & Code AI Tools CV

Portfolio at a glance

Research and policy

International trade, WTO policy, finance, agricultural economics, food security, sustainability, resource economics, and policy questions relevant to Oman and the GCC.

Teaching and supervision

Applied, data-driven, and policy-oriented teaching with econometrics, international trade, TINA simulations, R, Python, Google Colab, reproducible notebooks, and policy briefs.

Data, code, and methods

Reproducible research methods including PPML gravity estimation, GPML, wavelet coherence, quantile regression, hedonic demand modeling, non-market valuation, portfolio analysis, and visualization.

Academic tools

Experimental or planned research infrastructure such as ScholarDoc, ScholarTeX, LaTeX and Beamer workflows, visualization resources, and teaching support tools.

Current focus

TipPublic-facing priorities
  • Oman food security, food CPI, and price transmission from global commodity markets.
  • WTO Chair research on trade policy, GCC integration, non-tariff measures, WTO agreements, and evidence-based trade-policy dialogue.
  • TINA-based FTA simulations in international trade teaching and applied policy education.
  • Applied data visualization and Python teaching materials for economics students.
  • ScholarDoc and ScholarTeX academic tools for structured writing, LaTeX, and document workflows.
  • Algorithmic trading and market microstructure applications as technical research and teaching interests, not investment advice.

Professional profiles