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Michael Rothschild

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Nationality
  
United States

Role
  
Economist

Name
  
Michael Rothschild

Born
  
August 2, 1942 (age 81) (
1942-08-02
)
Chicago, Illinois

Institution
  
Department of Economics, University of California, Los Angeles

Alma mater
  
MIT (Ph.D., 1969) Yale University (M.A., 1965) Reed College (B.A., 1963)

Books
  
Rothschild Adv Arch Kit-Apple-Na, Advertising Arch Kit IBM 5-1/4 Na

Education
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1969), Yale University, Reed College

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Social Sciences, US & Canada

Fields
  
Microeconomics, Public economics

Michael rothschild ph d


Michael Rothschild (born August 2, 1942 in Chicago, Illinois, United States) is an American economist; he is visiting professor at the Department of Economics of the University of California in Los Angeles (UCLA) and a former dean at Princeton.

Contents

Education

Rothschild holds a Bachelor of Arts in anthropology from Reed College (1963), and a Master of Arts in international relations from Yale University (1965). He earned his Doctor of Philosophy in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1969).

Academic career

He was the William Stuart Tod Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. He was dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University from 1995 through 2001. Rothschild has written on asymmetric information, decision-making under uncertainty, demography, investment, taxation, finance, and jury-decision processes.

He co-authored one of the most important papers in economics, Equilibrium in Competitive Insurance Markets: An Essay on the Economics of Imperfect Information, with Joseph Stiglitz. This paper gives the first systematic exposition of the problem of cherry picking when insurance companies compete for customers. In Increasing Risk I: A definition, Rothschild and Stiglitz introduced the important decision theory concept of the mean-preserving spread, which leads to a partial ordering of probability distributions according to degree of risk.
In 2001, the laureates of the Nobel Prize in Economics were George A. Akerlof, A. Michael Spence as well as J. E. Stiglitz "for their analyses of markets with asymmetric information". So one could say, Rothschild contributed to this prize.

References

Michael Rothschild Wikipedia