Medalha John Bates Clark
A Medalha John Bates Clark (em inglês: John Bates Clark Medal) é concedida pela American Economic Association para "aquele economista estadunidense com idade inferior a 40 anos que fez uma contribuição significativa ao pensamento e conhecimento econômico".[1]
De acordo com o periódico The Chronicle of Higher Education, a medalha "é amplamente reconhecida como um dos mais prestigiosos prêmios em seu campo, talvez suplantada apenas pelo Nobel de Economia."[2] A medalha era bianual até 2007, e está sendo concedida anualmente desde 2009, porque muitos merecedores da condecoração estavam sendo alijados.[3] O comitê citou economistas como Edward Glaeser e John List em campanha pela anualidade da medalha.
Homenageia o economista neoclássico John Bates Clark. Embora tenha o rótulo "economista estadunidense", basta no entanto que o laureado trabalhe nos Estados Unidos na época de sua nomeação, não sendo necessária a nacionalidade estadunidense.[4]
Laureados
[editar | editar código-fonte]Ano | Medalhista | Instituição (Quando homenageado) | Alma mater (PhD) | Nacionalidade |
---|---|---|---|---|
1947 | Paul Samuelson | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Harvard University | United States |
1949 | Kenneth Boulding | University of Michigan | University of Oxford | United States |
1951 | Milton Friedman | University of Chicago | Columbia University | United States |
1955 | James Tobin | Yale University | Harvard University | United States |
1957 | Kenneth Arrow | Stanford University | Columbia University | United States |
1959 | Lawrence Klein | University of Pennsylvania | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
1961 | Robert Solow | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Harvard University | United States |
1963 | Hendrik S. Houthakker | Harvard University | Universidade de Amsterdan | Netherlands |
1965 | Zvi Griliches | Harvard University | University of Chicago | Israel |
1967 | Gary Becker | University of Chicago | University of Chicago | United States |
1969 | Marc Nerlove | Yale University | Johns Hopkins University | United States |
1971 | Dale W. Jorgenson | Harvard University | Harvard University | United States |
1973 | Franklin M. Fisher | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Harvard University | United States |
1975 | Daniel McFadden | University of California, Berkeley | University of Minnesota | United States |
1977 | Martin Feldstein | Harvard University | University of Oxford | United States |
1979 | Joseph Stiglitz | Princeton University | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
1981 | Michael Spence | Harvard University | Harvard University | United States |
1983 | James Heckman | University of Chicago | Princeton University | United States |
1985 | Jerry A. Hausman | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | University of Oxford | United States |
1987 | Sanford J. Grossman | Princeton University | University of Chicago | United States |
1989 | David M. Kreps | Stanford University | Stanford University | United States |
1991 | Paul Krugman | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
1993 | Lawrence Summers | World Bank | Harvard University | United States |
1995 | David Card | University of California, Berkeley | Princeton University | Canadá |
1997 | Kevin M. Murphy | University of Chicago | University of Chicago | United States |
1999 | Andrei Shleifer | Harvard University | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
2001 | Matthew Rabin | University of California, Berkeley | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
2003 | Steven Levitt | University of Chicago | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
2005 | Daron Acemoglu | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | London School of Economics | Turkey, United States |
2007 | Susan Athey | Stanford University | Stanford University | United States |
2009 | Emmanuel Saez | University of California, Berkeley | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | France |
2010 | Esther Duflo | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | France |
2011 | Jonathan Levin | Stanford University | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
2012 | Amy Finkelstein | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | United States |
2013 | Raj Chetty | Harvard University | Harvard University | United States |
2014 | Matthew Gentzkow | University of Chicago | Harvard University | United States |
2015 | Roland G. Fryer Jr. | Harvard University | Pennsylvania State University | United States |
2016 | Yuliy Sannikov | Princeton University | Stanford University | Ucrânia |
2017 | Dave Donaldson[5] | Stanford University[6] | London School of Economics | Canada |
2018 | Parag Pathak[7] | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Harvard University | United States[8] |
- ↑ «John Bates Clark Medal». Consultado em 21 de outubro de 2011. Arquivado do original em 21 de maio de 2008
- ↑ Chronicle of Higher Education, April 24, 2009.
- ↑ New York Times January 4, 2009
- ↑ «American Economic Association». www.aeaweb.org. Consultado em 14 de março de 2019
- ↑ «A trade economist wins the John Bates Clark medal»
- ↑ «Professor Dave Donaldson awarded the 2017 John Bates Clark Medal – Economics». economics.stanford.edu
- ↑ «Parag Pathak, Clark Medalist 2018». American Economic Association. Consultado em 20 de abril de 2018
- ↑ «Parag Pathak, 2003». P.D. Soros Fellowship for New Americans. Consultado em 20 de abril de 2018
Ligações externas
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