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Robert J Gordon

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Robert Gordon


Role
  
Economist

Fields
  
Macroeconomics

Robert J. Gordon Robert J Gordon


Born
  
September 3, 1940 (age 83) (
1940-09-03
)

Institution
  
Northwestern University

School or tradition
  
New Keynesian economics

Alma mater
  
Harvard University (1962) Oxford University (1964) MIT (1967)

Contributions
  
Core inflation Productivity Growth theory

Education
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1967), Harvard University, University of Oxford

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Social Sciences, US & Canada

Books
  
Macroeconomics, Productivity Growth - Inflation, Macroeconomics: Pearson New Inter, Macroeconomics: Student Value Edi, Macroeconomics & Student Access Kit

22 may session 1 peter praet jordi gal robert j gordon


Robert James "Bob" Gordon is an American economist. He is the Stanley G. Harris Professor of the Social Sciences at Northwestern University. He is known for his work on productivity, growth, the causes of unemployment, and airline economics.

Contents

Robert J. Gordon GDI News Detail Robert J Gordon kommt ins GDI

The rise and fall of american growth an interview with professor robert j gordon


Education

Robert J. Gordon The Rise and Fall of American Growth an interview with Professor

Gordon graduated Magna Cum Laude with a B.A. from Harvard University in 1962. He then attended Oxford University and received his B.A. in 1964. He received his Ph.D. from MIT in 1967 with a dissertation titled Problems in the Measurement of Real Investment in the U.S. Private Economy.

Career and contributions

Robert J. Gordon Robert Gordon Erik Brynjolfsson debate the future of work at

From 1995 to 1997, he served on the Boskin Commission to assess the accuracy of the United States Consumer Price Index (CPI), having written the definitive criticism of CPI inflation overstatement in 1990. He is also a member of the Business Cycle Dating Committee of the NBER, which determines when recessions start and end.

Robert J. Gordon's popular text Macroeconomics was the first to incorporate the rational expectations hypothesis into the analysis of the Phillips curve. Soon all subsequent macro textbooks were expounding the "Expectations Augmented Phillips Curve." In addition, Gordon has written for economic journals, outlining the relation of the productivity growth of modern-day inventions to the great inventions of the late 19th century. He focuses on the impact of computers in the post-1995 economy on the durable manufacturing sector. Furthermore, he emphasises the marginal productivity of computing technology affects standard of living in a much more contained fashion than the earlier great American inventions. He downplays the role of computer technology in the economic growth of the latter 20th century in accounting for business cycle and trends. In addition, he also questions the actual productivity of such technological developments.

Family

Gordon is a member of a family of economists. Both his parents Robert Aaron and Margaret earned distinction independently, each contributing to economic knowledge with a view to real practical benefit for society, as did his brother David, himself more of a radical. For example, his father is the namesake of the "Gordon Report" which proposed reforms for the computation of the unemployment rate by the US Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics. He currently resides in Evanston, Illinois with his wife Julie.

Selected works

  • The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living Since the Civil War. Princeton University Press. 2016. ISBN 978-0691147727.
  • Macroeconomics. Addison Wesley. 2002. ISBN 0-201-77036-9. 
  • The Measurement of Durable Goods Prices. University of Chicago Press. 1990. ISBN 0-226-30455-8. 
  • "The Demand for and Supply of Inflation". Journal of Law and Economics. 18 (3): 807–836. 1975. JSTOR 725066. doi:10.1086/466845. 
  • "Recent Developments in the Theory of Inflation and Unemployment". Journal of Monetary Economics. 2 (2): 195–219. 1976. doi:10.1016/0304-3932(76)90033-7. 
  • Milton Friedman's Monetary Framework: A Debate With His Critics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1977. 
  • References

    Robert J. Gordon Wikipedia