Paul Roderick Gregory (born 10 February 1941 in San Angelo, Texas) is a professor of economics at the University of Houston, Texas, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and a research fellow at the German Institute for Economic Research. He has written about Russia and the Soviet Union.
He received his B. A. in 1963 and M. A. in 1964 from University of Oklahoma and his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in 1969.
Women of the Gulag: Stories of Five Remarkable Lives, Hoover Institution Press, 2013Politics, Murder and Love in Stalin's Kremlin: The Story of Nikolai Bukharin and Anna Larina, Hoover Institution Press, 2010Terror by Quota: State Security from Lenin to Stalin, Yale University Press, 2009Lenin’s Brain and Other Tales from the Secret Soviet Archives, Hoover Institution Press, 2008The Political Economy of Stalinism, Cambridge University Press, 2004 (Ed A Hewett Book Prize)Russian and Soviet Economic Performance and Structure, Addison-Wesley, 2001, with Robert C. StuartPrinciples of Macroeconomics, Addison-Wesley, 2001, 7th edition, with Roy J. RuffinBefore Command: An Economic History of Russia from Emancipation to First Five-years Plan, Princeton University Press, 1994Restructuring the Soviet Economic Bureaucracy, Cambridge University Press, 1990.Russian National Income. 1885-1913, Cambridge University Press, 1982