Panka Bencsik
Assistant Professor of Medicine, Health, and Society and of Public Policy
Panka Bencsik is an Assistant Professor of Medicine, Health, and Society and of Public Policy at Vanderbilt University. Additionally, she is a faculty affiliate at the Vanderbilt Center for Research on Inequality and Health.
Professor Bencsik is an applied microeconomist whose research covers the fields of health economics, crime economics, and public economics. She has worked extensively on topics related to the opioid crisis, mental health, alternatives to prosecution, and gun violence. Her research has been covered by major media outlets, including The Economist and the Chicago Tribune, and by policymakers, such as the Mayor’s Office of Chicago. Professor Bencsik also served as the founding leader of the world’s largest research hub on mental health economics.
Before joining Vanderbilt University, Professor Bencsik was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Chicago, Urban Labs. Prior, she received her PhD in economics from the University of Sussex and was a Fulbright Fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC.
Specializations
- Opioid crisis
- Mental health
- US criminal justice system
- Gun violence
Representative Publications
Desmond Ang, Panka Bencsik, Jesse Bruhn, and Ellora Derenoncourt. (2025.) Community Engagement with Law Enforcement after High-profile Acts of Police Violence. American Economic Review: Insights. 7 (1): 124-42.
Panka Bencsik, Lester Lusher, and Becca Taylor. (2025.) Slow Travel, Fast Food: The Effects of Time Lost on Food Store Choice. Journal of Urban Economics. Vol. 146, 103737.
Panka Bencsik, Timothy Halliday, and Bhash Mazumder. (2023). The Intergenerational Transmission of Mental and Physical Health in the United Kingdom. Journal of Health Economics. Vol. 92. 102805.