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William Baumol

William Jack Baumol (February 26, 1922 – May 4, 2017) was an American economist. He was a professor of economics at New York University, Academic Director of the Berkley Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, and Professor Emeritus at Princeton University. He was a prolific author of more than eighty books and several hundred journal articles.[2] He is the namesake of the Baumol effect.

William Baumol

William Jack Baumol

(1922-02-26)February 26, 1922
New York City, U.S.

May 4, 2017(2017-05-04) (aged 95)

New York City, U.S.

Baumol–Tobin model
Baumol's cost disease
Contestable market theory
Sales revenue maximization model

Baumol wrote extensively about labor market and other economic factors that affect the economy. He also made significant contributions to the theory of entrepreneurship and the history of economic thought. He is among the most influential economists in the world according to IDEAS/RePEc. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1971,[3] the American Philosophical Society in 1977,[4] and the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1987.[5]


Baumol was considered a candidate for the Nobel Prize in Economics for 2003,[6] and Thomson Reuters cited him as a potential recipient in 2014,[7] but he died without receiving the prize.

Early life[edit]

Baumol was born in the South Bronx. His parents, Solomon and Lillian, were both immigrants from Eastern Europe.[8]


Baumol studied at the City College of New York and was awarded his bachelor's degree in 1942. After college, he served in the U.S. Army in World War II and later worked for the Department of Agriculture as an economist.[8][9]

Education[edit]

He was initially denied entry to the doctoral studies at the London School of Economics and was instead admitted to the Master's program. After impressing onlookers with his debating skills at Lionel Robbins' seminars, he was within weeks switched to the doctoral program and also admitted to the faculty as an Assistant Lecturer.[10]

Teaching[edit]

While a professor at Princeton University he supervised some graduate students who would eventually become very well-known economists, including Burton Malkiel, William G. Bowen, and Harold Tafler Shapiro.[1]

Professional and philanthropic interests[edit]

Baumol was a trustee of Economists for Peace and Security. Baumol was known for his interests in the economics of art, including the economics of the performing arts.[25]

Death[edit]

Baumol died on May 4, 2017, at the age of 95.[25][26]

"Community Indifference", 1946, RES

"A Community Indifference Map: A construction", 1949, RES.

"A Formalization of Mr. Harrod's Model", 1949, EJ.

"The Analogy between Producer and Consumer Equilibrium Analysis", with Helen Makower, 1950, Economica.

Economic Dynamics, with R. Turvey, 1951.

"The Transaction Demand for Cash: An inventory-theoretic approach", 1952, QJE.

"The Classical Monetary Theory: The outcome of the discussion", with G.S. Becker, 1952, Economica.

Welfare Economics and the Theory of the State, 1952.

"Firms with Limited Money Capital", 1953, Kyklos.

Economic Processes and Policies, with L.V. Chandler, 1954.

"More on the Multiplier Effect of a Balanced Budget", with M.H. Peston, 1955, AER.

"Acceleration without Magnification", 1956, AER.

"Variety in Retailing", with E.A. Ide, 1956 Management Science.

"Speculation, Profitability and Stability", 1957, REStat.

"Activity Analysis in One Lesson", 1958, AER.

"On the Theory of Oligopoly", 1958, Economica.

"Topology of Second Order Linear Difference Equations with Constant Coefficients", 1958, Econometrica.

"The Cardinal Utility which is Ordinal", 1958, EJ.

Business Behavior, Value and Growth, 1959.

"Integer Programming and Pricing", with R.E. Gomory, 1960, Econometrica.

Economic Theory and Operations Analysis, 1961.

"What Can Economic Theory Contribute to Managerial Economics?", 1961, AER.

"Pitfalls in Contracyclical Policies: Some tools and results", 1961, REStat.

"The Theory of Expansion of the Firm", 1962, AER.

"Stocks, Flows and Monetary Theory", 1962, QJE.

"An Expected Gain-Confidence Limit Criterion for Portfolio Selection", 1963, Management Science.

"Rules of Thumb and Optimally Imperfect Decisions", with R. E. Quandt, 1964, American Economic Review, 54, p. 23–46

"Decomposition, Pricing for Decentralization and External Economics", with T.Fabian, 1964, Management Science.

"On the Performing Arts: the anatomy of their economic problems", with W.G. Bowen, 1965, AER.

"Investment and Discount Rates Under Capital Rationing", with R.E.Quandt, 1965, EJ.

"Informed Judgement, Rigorous Theory and Public Policy", 1965, Southern EJ.

The Stock Market and Economic Efficiency, 1965.

Performing Arts: the economic dilemma, 1966.

"The Ricardo Effect in Point-Input, Point-Output Case", 1966, Essays in Mathematical Economics in Honor of Oskar Morgenstern.

"Macroeconomics of Unbalanced Growth: The anatomy of urban crisis", 1967, AER.

"Calculation of Optimal Product and Retailer Characteristics", 1967, JPE.

"The Firm's Optimal Debt-Equity Combination and the Cost of Capital", with B.G. Malkiel, 1967, QJE.

"Error Produced by Linearization in Mathematical Programming", with R. Bushnell, 1967, Econometrica.

"The Dual of Nonlinear Programming and its Economic Interpretation", with , 1968, RES.

M.L.Balinski

"Entrepreneurship in Economic Theory", 1968, May, American Economic Review

"On the Social Rate of Discount", 1968, AER.

"On the Discount Rate for Public Projects", 1969, Analysis and Evaluation of Public Expenditures.

"Input Choices and Rate-of-Return Regulation: An overview of the discussion", with A.K.Klevorick, 1970, Bell JE.

"Optimal Departures from Marginal Cost Pricing", with D.F. Bradford, 1970, AER.

"The Economics of Athenian Drama", 1971, QJE.

Environmental protection, International Spillovers and Trade, 1971.

"On the Economics of the Theatre in Renaissance London" with Mary Oates, 1972, Swedish JE.

"The Dynamics of Urban Problems and its Policy Implications", 1972, in Preston and Corry, editors, Essays in Honor of Lord Robbins.

"Taxation and the Control of Externalities", 1972, AER.

"Detrimental Externalities and Non-Convexity of the Production Set", with D.F. Bradford, 1972, Economica.

"The Transformation of Values: What Marx 'Really' Meant", 1974, JEL.

The Theory of Environmental Policy, with W.E.Oates, 1975.

Economics, Environmental Policy and Quality of Life, with W.E.Oates and S.A. Batey Blackman 1979.

Contestable Markets and the Theory of Industry Structure, with J.C. Panzar and R.D. Wilig, 1982

"Contestable Markets: An Uprising in the Theory of Industry Structure", 1982, "AER".

Microtheory: Applications and origins, 1986

Superfairness: Application and theory, with D. Fischer, 1986

"The Optimal Cash Balance Proposition: Maurice Allais' Priority", with J. Tobin, 1989, JEL

Productivity and American Leadership: The long view, with S.A. Batey Blackman and E.N. Wolff, 1989.

Entrepreneurship: Productive, Unproductive and Destructive, Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 98(3), pp. 893–921, 1990

Perfect Markets and Easy Virtue: Business ethics and the invisible hand, with S.A. Batey Blackman, 1992

Entrepreneurship, Management and the Structure of Profit, 1993.

The Free Market Innovation Machine: Analyzing the Growth Miracle of Capitalism, 2002.

Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism, and the Economics of Growth and Prosperity, co-authored with Robert Litan and Carl J. Schramm, 2007

The Cost Disease: Why Computers get Cheaper and Health Care Doesn't, 2012

https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300198157/cost-disease

William Baumol was President of the for 1981.

American Economic Association

1953 Fellow, Econometric Society

1957–58 Guggenheim Fellow

1960–70 Trustee, Rider College

1965 Honorary LL.D, Rider College (Trustee Emeritus)

1965–66 Ford Faculty Fellowship

1970 Honorary Fellow,

London School of Economics

1971 Honorary Doctorate, Stockholm School of Economics

1973 Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, Knox College

1973 Honorary Doctorate, University of Basel

1975 John R. Commons Award,

Omicron Delta Epsilon

1975 Townsend Harris Medal, Alumni Association of the City College of New York

1982 Distinguished Fellow, American Economic Association

1984 Distinguished Member, Economic Association of Puerto Rico

1986 Winner, Assoc. of American Publishers Award for Best Book in Business, Management and Economics, Superfairness: Applications and Theory

1987 Recipient, Frank E. Seidman Distinguished Award in Political Economy

1988 Joseph Douglas Green 1895 Professor of Economics, Princeton University

1989 Winner, Assoc. of Am. Publishers Annual Awards for Excellence in Publishing, Honorable Mention in Social Sciences, Productivity and American Leadership: The Long View

1992 Recipient, First Senior Scholar in the Arts and Sciences Award, New York University

1996 Honorary Degree, University of Limburg, Maastricht, Netherlands

1996 Honorary Professorship, University of Belgrano, Buenos Aires, Argentina

1999, Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, Princeton University

2003 Winner of the Global Award for Entrepreneurship Research, the Swedish Entrepreneurship Forum (Entreprenörskapsforum), the Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN) and the Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional Growth (Tillväxtverket), Stockholm, Sweden

Baumol–Tobin model

Baumol's cost disease

Baumol home page

Entrepreneurship: Productive, Unproductive, and Destructive

– An interview with Baumol published in the Czech weekly Respekt and daily Blisty in 2003

The discrimination of blacks has increased the number of jazz composers