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Trygve Haavelmo

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Nationality
  
Norway

Education
  
University of Oslo

Role
  
Economist

Name
  
Trygve Haavelmo

Alma mater
  
University of Oslo


Trygve Haavelmo Trygve Haavelmo Department of Economics

Born
  
13 December 1911 (
1911-12-13
)
Skedsmo, Norway

Institution
  
University of Aarhus University of Chicago University of Oslo

Field
  
Macroeconomics, econometrics

School or tradition
  
Neo-Keynesian economics

Influences
  
John Maynard Keynes Ragnar Frisch Jan Tinbergen

Died
  
July 26, 1999, Oslo, Norway

Books
  
A study in the theory of economic evolution, A Study in the Theory of Investment

Awards
  
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences

Influenced
  
David Forbes Hendry, Soren Johansen, Judea Pearl

Similar People
  
Ragnar Frisch, Tjalling Koopmans, Jan Tinbergen, John Maynard Keynes, Judea Pearl

konomiprisen 1969 1989 trygve haavelmo og ragnar frisch


Trygve Magnus Haavelmo (13 December 1911 – 28 July 1999), born in Skedsmo, Norway, was an influential economist with main research interests centered on the fields of econometrics.

Contents

Trygve Haavelmo httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Biography

After attending Oslo Cathedral School, he received a degree in economics from the University of Oslo in 1930 and eventually joined the Institute of Economics with the recommendation of Ragnar Frisch. Haavelmo was Frisch’s assistant for a period of time until he was appointed as head of computations for the institute. In 1936, Haavelmo studied statistics at University College London (autumn 1936) while he subsequently traveled to Berlin, Geneva, and Oxford for additional studies. Trygve Haavelmo assumed a lecturing position at the University of Aarhus in 1938 for one year and then in the subsequent year was offered an academic scholarship to travel abroad and study in the United States. During World War II he worked with Nortraship in the Statistical Department in New York City. He received his Ph.D. in 1946 for his work on The Probability Approach in Econometrics.

He was a Professor of economics and statistics at the University of Oslo between 1948–79 and was the trade department head of division from 1947–48. Haavelmo acquires a prominent position in modern economics through his logical critique of a series of custom conceptions in mathematical analysis.

In 1989, Haavelmo was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics "for his clarification of the probability theory foundations of econometrics and his analyses of simultaneous economic structures."

Haavelmo resided at Østerås. He died on 28 July 1999 in Oslo.

Legacy

Judea Pearl wrote "Haavelmo was the first to recognize the capacity of economic models to guide policies" and "presented a mathematical procedure that takes an arbitrary model and produces quantitative answers to policy questions". According to Pearl, "Haavelmo's paper, ‘The Statistical Implications of a System of Simultaneous Equations’, marks a pivotal turning point, not in the statistical implications of econometric models, as historians typically presume, but in their causal counterparts." Haavelmo's idea that an economic model depicts a series of hypothetical experiments and that policies can be simulated by modifying equations in the model became the basis of all currently used formalisms of econometric causal inference. (The biostatistics and epidemiology literature on causal inference draws from different sources.) It was first operationalized by Robert H. Strotz and Herman Wold (1960) who advocated "wiping out" selected equations, and then translated into graphical models as "wiping out" incoming arrows. This operation has subsequently led to Pearl's "do"-calculus and to a mathematical theory of counterfactuals in econometric models. Pearl further speculates that the reason economists do not generally appreciate these revolutionary contributions of Haavelmo is because economists themselves have still not reached consensus of what an economic model stands for, as attested by profound disagreements among econometric textbooks.

References

Trygve Haavelmo Wikipedia