David J. Hebert is an associate professor of economics at Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, MI. He graduated with a Bachelor's degree in economics from Hillsdale College in 2009 and then attended George Mason University, where he earned a Masters in 2011 and Doctorate in 2014. During graduate school, he was a F.A. Hayek Fellow with the Mercatus Center, a Fellow with the Department of Health Administration and Policy, and also worked with the Joint Economic Committee in the U.S. Congress. Since graduating, he has worked as an Assistant Professor at Ferris State University and Troy University, and he was also a Fellow with the U.S. Senate Budget Committee, where he authored a comprehensive report on Federal budget process reform.
Dr. Hebert's area of expertise lies in public choice and public finance. Specifically, his research aims to address the question of why democracies around the world and throughout history systematically produce tax codes that are long, complicated, and contain numerous loopholes despite universal popular support for tax codes that are short, simple, and contain few (if any) loopholes. His work has appeared in numerous academic outlets as well as such popular outlets as The Hill, The Daily Caller, The Ripon Forum, and Investor's Business Daily.