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Thomas J. Sargent

Thomas John Sargent (born July 19, 1943) is an American economist and the W.R. Berkley Professor of Economics and Business at New York University.[2] He specializes in the fields of macroeconomics, monetary economics, and time series econometrics. As of 2020, he ranks as the 29th most cited economist in the world.[3] He was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2011 together with Christopher A. Sims for their "empirical research on cause and effect in the macroeconomy".[4]

Thomas J. Sargent
Sargent in 2011
Born (1943-07-19) July 19, 1943 (age 80)
NationalityAmerican
Academic career
InstitutionHoover Institution
Carnegie-Mellon University
University of Pennsylvania
University of Minnesota
University of Chicago
Stanford University
New York University
Peking University HSBC Business School
FieldMacroeconomics, monetary economics
Alma materUC Berkeley, (BA)
Harvard University, (PhD)
Doctoral
advisor
John R. Meyer
Doctoral
students
Robert Litterman
Monika Piazzesi
Mariacristina De Nardi
Ellen McGrattan
Lars Peter Hansen
Albert Marcet
Noah Williams
Laura Veldkamp
Richard Clarida
Danny Quah
Sagiri Kitao
Martin Eichenbaum
Lawrence J. Christiano
Greg Kaplan
InfluencesJohn F. Muth
Robert E. Lucas, Jr.
Christopher A. Sims
Neil Wallace
AwardsNAS Award for Scientific Reviewing (2011)

Nemmers Prize (1996)

Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2011)
Information at IDEAS / RePEc
Thomas J. Sargent
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service1968-1969
Rank Captain[1]

Education Edit

Sargent graduated from Monrovia High School.[5] He earned his B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1964, being the University Medalist as Most Distinguished Scholar in Class of 1964, and his PhD from Harvard in 1968, under supervision of John R. Meyer.[6] Sargent's classmates at Harvard included Christopher A. Sims. After serving in the U.S. Army as a first lieutenant and captain, he moved on to teaching.[7] He held teaching positions at the University of Pennsylvania (1970–71), University of Minnesota (1971–87), University of Chicago (1991–98), Stanford University (1998–2002) and Princeton University (2009), and is currently a professor of economics at New York University (since 2002). He previously held the position of President of the American Economic Association and the Econometric Society where he has been a fellow since 1976.[7] In 1983, Sargent was elected to the National Academy of Sciences and also the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[8] He has been a senior fellow of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University since 1987.

Professional contributions Edit

Sargent is one of the leaders of the "rational expectations revolution," which argues that the people being modeled by economists can predict the future, or the probability of future outcomes, at least as well as the economist can with his model. Rational expectations was introduced into economics by John Muth,[9] then Robert Lucas, Jr., and Edward C. Prescott took it much farther. In work written in close collaboration with Lucas and Neil Wallace, Thomas J. Sargent contributed fundamentally to the evolution of new classical macroeconomics.[10]

Sargent's main contributions to rational expectations were these:

In 1975 he and Wallace proposed the policy-ineffectiveness proposition, which challenged a basic assumption of Keynesian economics.

Sargent went on to refine or extend rational expectations reasoning by further:

Sargent has also been a pioneer in introducing recursive economics to academic study, especially for macroeconomic issues such as unemployment, fiscal and monetary policy, and growth. His series of textbooks, co-authored with Lars Ljungqvist, are seminal in the contemporary graduate economics curriculum.

Sargent has pursued a research program with Ljungqvist[26] designed to understand determinants of differences in unemployment outcomes in Europe and the United States during the last 30 years. The two key questions the program addresses are why, in the 1950s and 1960s, unemployment was systematically lower in Europe than in the United States and why, for two and a half decades after 1980, unemployment has been systematically higher in Europe than in the United States. In "Two Questions about European Unemployment," the answer is that "Europe has stronger employment protection despite also having had more generous government supplied unemployment compensation"." While the institutional differences remained the same over this time period, the microeconomic environment for workers changed, with a higher risk of human capital depreciation in the 1980s.[27]

In 1997, he won the Nemmers Prize in Economics[28]

In 2011, he was awarded the NAS Award for Scientific Reviewing from the National Academy of Sciences[29] and, in September, he became the recipient of the 2011 CME Group-MSRI Prize in Innovative Quantitative Applications.[30]

Sargent is known as a devoted teacher. Among his PhD advisees are men and women at the forefront of macroeconomic research[who?]. Sargent's reading group at Stanford and NYU is a famous institution among graduate students in economics.[31][32]

In 2016, Sargent helped found the non-profit QuantEcon project, which is dedicated to the development and documentation of modern open source computational tools for economics, econometrics, and decision making.[33]

Currently he is director of the Sargent Institute of Quantitative Economics and Finance (SIQEF) at Peking University HSBC Business School in Shenzhen.[34]

Nobel Prize Edit

Interview with Thomas J. Sargent after his Nobel lecture

On October 10, 2011, Sargent, with Christopher A. Sims, was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. The award cited their "empirical research on cause and effect in the macroeconomy".[35] His Nobel lecture, "United States Then, Europe Now," was delivered on December 11, 2011.[36][37]

In popular culture Edit

He is featured playing himself in a television commercial for Ally Financial in which he is asked if he can predict CD rates two years from now, to which he simply answers, "No."[38]

Sargent is notable for making short speeches. For example, in 2007 his Berkeley graduation speech consumed 335 words.[39][40]

Selected publications Edit

  • Sargent, Thomas J. (1971). "A Note on the Accelerationist Controversy". Journal of Money, Credit and Banking. 3 (3): 721–25. doi:10.2307/1991369. JSTOR 1991369.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. & Neil Wallace (1973). "The Stability of Models of Money and Growth with Perfect Foresight". Econometrica. 41 (6): 1043–48. doi:10.2307/1914034. JSTOR 1914034.
  • Sargent, Thomas & Wallace, Neil (1975). "'Rational' Expectations, the Optimal Monetary Instrument, and the Optimal Money Supply Rule". Journal of Political Economy. 83 (2): 241–54. doi:10.1086/260321. S2CID 154301791.
  • Sargent, Thomas & Wallace, Neil (1976). "Rational Expectations and the Theory of Economic Policy" (PDF). Journal of Monetary Economics. 2 (2): 169–83. doi:10.1016/0304-3932(76)90032-5.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. (1987) [1979]. Macroeconomic Theory. New York: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-619750-1.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. and Lars P. Hansen (1980). "Formulating and Estimating Dynamic Linear Rational Expectations Models" (PDF). Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control. 2 (1): 7–46. doi:10.1016/0165-1889(80)90049-4.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. & Neil Wallace (1981). "Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review. 5 (3): 1–17.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. (1983). "The Ends of Four Big Inflations" in: Inflation: Causes and Effects, ed. by Robert E. Hall, University of Chicago Press, for the NBER, 1983, pp. 41–97.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. (1987). Dynamic Macroeconomic Theory. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-21877-2.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. and Albert Marcet (1989). "Convergence of Least Squares Learning Mechanisms in Self-Referential Linear Stochastic Models". Journal of Economic Theory. 48 (2): 337–68. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(89)90032-X.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. & Albert Marcet (1989). "Convergence of Least Squares Learning in Environments with Hidden State Variables and Private Information". Journal of Political Economy. 97 (6): 251. doi:10.1086/261603. S2CID 154864867.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. & Lars Ljungqvist (2000). Recursive Macroeconomic Theory. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-12274-0.
  • Sargent, Thomas J. & Lars Hansen (2001). "Robust Control and Model Uncertainty". American Economic Review. 91 (2): 60–66. doi:10.1257/aer.91.2.60.

References Edit

  1. ^ "NYU Bio: Thomas J. Sargent". NYU Stern. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  2. ^ "NYU Bio: Thomas J. Sargent". NYU Stern. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  3. ^ "Economist Rankings at IDEAS". Ideas.repec.org. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  4. ^ "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2011" (Press release). Nobel Prize. 10 October 2011.
  5. ^ . Pasadena Star-News. 10 October 2011. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015.
  6. ^ Sent, Esther-Mirjam (2006). The Evolving Rationality of Rational Expectations: An Assessment of Thomas Sargent's Achievements. Cambridge University Press. p. 35. ISBN 9780521027717.
  7. ^ a b URL:https://www.stern.nyu.edu/faculty/bio/thomas-sargent
  8. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2011: Chapter S" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 13 October 2011.
  9. ^ Muth, J. F. (1961). "Rational Expectations and the Theory of Price Movements". Econometrica. 29 (3): 315–35. doi:10.2307/1909635. JSTOR 1909635.
  10. ^ Galbács, Peter (2015). The Theory of New Classical Macroeconomics. A Positive Critique. Contributions to Economics. Heidelberg/New York/Dordrecht/London: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17578-2. ISBN 978-3-319-17578-2.
  11. ^ Sargent, Thomas J., and Neil Wallace, 1975. "'Rational' Expectations, the Optimal Monetary Instrument, and the Optimal Money Supply Rule," Journal of Political Economy, 83(2), pp. pp. 241–54.
  12. ^ Sargent, T. J. (1981). "Interpreting Economic Time Series" (PDF). The Journal of Political Economy. 89 (2): 213–48. doi:10.1086/260963. JSTOR 1833309. S2CID 152875567.
  13. ^ Sargent, Thomas J.; Wallace, Neil (1976). "Rational Expectations and the Theory of Economic Policy" (PDF). Journal of Monetary Economics. 2 (2): 169–83. doi:10.1016/0304-3932(76)90032-5.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ Sargent, T. J. (1979). "A note on maximum likelihood estimation of the rational expectations model of the term structure" (PDF). Journal of Monetary Economics. 5: 133–35. doi:10.1016/0304-3932(79)90029-1.
  15. ^ Sargent, T. J. (1977). "The Demand for Money during Hyperinflations under Rational Expectations: I". International Economic Review. 18 (1): 59–82. doi:10.2307/2525769. JSTOR 2525769.
  16. ^ Sargent, T. J.; Fand, D.; Goldfeld, S. (1973). "Rational Expectations, the Real Rate of Interest, and the Natural Rate of Unemployment". Brookings Papers on Economic Activity. 1973 (2): 429–80. doi:10.2307/2534097. JSTOR 2534097.
  17. ^ Sargent, Thomas J. & Neil Wallace (1981). "Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review. 5 (3): 1–17.
  18. ^ Sargent, Thomas J. (1983). "The Ends of Four Big Inflations" in: Inflation: Causes and Effects, ed. by Robert E. Hall, University of Chicago Press, for the NBER, 1983, p. 41–97.
  19. ^ Sargent, T. J.; Velde, F. O. R. (1995). "Macroeconomic Features of the French Revolution". The Journal of Political Economy. 103 (3): 474–518. doi:10.1086/261992. S2CID 153904650.
  20. ^ Sargent, Thomas J. (1992). Rational Expectations and Inflation. Harper and Row. ISBN 978-0-06-500280-5.
  21. ^ Sargent, Thomas J.; Velde, F.R. (2003). The Big Problem of Small Change. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11635-8.
  22. ^ Sargent, Thomas J. (1993). Bounded Rationality in Macroeconomics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-828869-5. Description and chapter-preview 1st-page links.
  23. ^ Marcet, A. (1989). "Convergence of least squares learning mechanisms in self-referential linear stochastic models*1". Journal of Economic Theory. 48 (2): 337–68. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(89)90032-X.
  24. ^ a b Sargent, Thomas J. (1999). The Conquest of American Inflation. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00414-3.
  25. ^ Hansen, Lars Peter; Sargent, Thomas J. (2008). Robustness. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11442-2.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-12-29.
  27. ^ Ljungqvist, L.; Sargent, T. J. (2008). "Two Questions about European Unemployment". Econometrica. 76: 1. doi:10.1111/j.0012-9682.2008.00816.x.
  28. ^ "NYU Stern - Thomas Sargent - William R. Berkley Professor of Economics and Business".
  29. ^ . National Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on 18 March 2011. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  30. ^ "2011 CME Group-MSRI Prize".
  31. ^ "Conference in Honor of Tom Sargent's Nobel Prize in Economics and Reading Group Reunion".
  32. ^ "Videos of Reading Group Conference". YouTube.
  33. ^ "QuantEcon". QuantEcon. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  34. ^ "Interview with Thomas Sargent on the PHD and Elite MA Programs at PHBS - News - Sargent Institute of Quantitative Economics of Finance".
  35. ^ "The Prize in Economic Sciences 2011". Nobelprize.org. 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  36. ^ Sargent, Thomas J. (2011)
  37. ^ United States Then, Europe Now 2013-01-15 at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ AdWeek: Economist Thomas J. Sargent appears in ad for Ally Bank
  39. ^ Tom Sargent Summarizes Economics
  40. ^ Text of Berkeley Speech 2014-08-11 at the Wayback Machine

External links Edit

  • Thomas J. Sargent – NYU Stern
  • Sargent personal website
  • Bloomberg News "Nobels Give Econometrics Pioneers Their Due"
  • Thomas J. Sargent on Nobelprize.org  

thomas, sargent, thomas, sargent, redirects, here, admiral, thomas, sargent, british, music, hall, comedian, born, thomas, sargent, miller, comedian, thomas, john, sargent, born, july, 1943, american, economist, berkley, professor, economics, business, york, u. Thomas Sargent redirects here For the admiral see Thomas R Sargent III For the British music hall comedian born Thomas Sargent see Max Miller comedian Thomas John Sargent born July 19 1943 is an American economist and the W R Berkley Professor of Economics and Business at New York University 2 He specializes in the fields of macroeconomics monetary economics and time series econometrics As of 2020 he ranks as the 29th most cited economist in the world 3 He was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2011 together with Christopher A Sims for their empirical research on cause and effect in the macroeconomy 4 Thomas J SargentSargent in 2011Born 1943 07 19 July 19 1943 age 80 Pasadena California NationalityAmericanAcademic careerInstitutionHoover InstitutionCarnegie Mellon UniversityUniversity of PennsylvaniaUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of ChicagoStanford UniversityNew York UniversityPeking University HSBC Business SchoolFieldMacroeconomics monetary economicsAlma materUC Berkeley BA Harvard University PhD DoctoraladvisorJohn R MeyerDoctoralstudentsRobert LittermanMonika PiazzesiMariacristina De NardiEllen McGrattanLars Peter HansenAlbert MarcetNoah WilliamsLaura VeldkampRichard ClaridaDanny QuahSagiri KitaoMartin EichenbaumLawrence J ChristianoGreg KaplanInfluencesJohn F MuthRobert E Lucas Jr Christopher A SimsNeil WallaceAwardsNAS Award for Scientific Reviewing 2011 Nemmers Prize 1996 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences 2011 Information at IDEAS RePEcThomas J SargentAllegiance United StatesService wbr branch United States ArmyYears of service1968 1969RankCaptain 1 Contents 1 Education 2 Professional contributions 3 Nobel Prize 4 In popular culture 5 Selected publications 6 References 7 External linksEducation EditSargent graduated from Monrovia High School 5 He earned his B A from the University of California Berkeley in 1964 being the University Medalist as Most Distinguished Scholar in Class of 1964 and his PhD from Harvard in 1968 under supervision of John R Meyer 6 Sargent s classmates at Harvard included Christopher A Sims After serving in the U S Army as a first lieutenant and captain he moved on to teaching 7 He held teaching positions at the University of Pennsylvania 1970 71 University of Minnesota 1971 87 University of Chicago 1991 98 Stanford University 1998 2002 and Princeton University 2009 and is currently a professor of economics at New York University since 2002 He previously held the position of President of the American Economic Association and the Econometric Society where he has been a fellow since 1976 7 In 1983 Sargent was elected to the National Academy of Sciences and also the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 8 He has been a senior fellow of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University since 1987 Professional contributions EditSargent is one of the leaders of the rational expectations revolution which argues that the people being modeled by economists can predict the future or the probability of future outcomes at least as well as the economist can with his model Rational expectations was introduced into economics by John Muth 9 then Robert Lucas Jr and Edward C Prescott took it much farther In work written in close collaboration with Lucas and Neil Wallace Thomas J Sargent contributed fundamentally to the evolution of new classical macroeconomics 10 Sargent s main contributions to rational expectations were these trace the implications of rational expectations with Wallace for alternative monetary policy instruments and rules on output stability and price determinacy 11 help make the theory of rational expectations statistically operational 12 provide some early examples of rational expectations models of the Phillips curve the term structure of interest rates and the demand for money during hyperinflations 13 14 15 16 analyze along with Wallace the dimensions along which monetary and fiscal policy must be coordinated intertemporally 17 conduct several historical studies that put rational expectations reasoning to work to explain consequences of dramatic changes in macroeconomic policy regimes 18 19 20 21 In 1975 he and Wallace proposed the policy ineffectiveness proposition which challenged a basic assumption of Keynesian economics Sargent went on to refine or extend rational expectations reasoning by further studying the conditions under which systems with bounded rationality of agents and adaptive learners converge to rational expectations 22 23 24 using the notion of a self confirming equilibrium a weaker notion of rational expectations suggested by limits of learning models 24 studying contexts with Lars Peter Hansen in which decision makers do not trust their probability model In particular Hansen and Sargent adapt and extend methods from robust control theory 25 Sargent has also been a pioneer in introducing recursive economics to academic study especially for macroeconomic issues such as unemployment fiscal and monetary policy and growth His series of textbooks co authored with Lars Ljungqvist are seminal in the contemporary graduate economics curriculum Sargent has pursued a research program with Ljungqvist 26 designed to understand determinants of differences in unemployment outcomes in Europe and the United States during the last 30 years The two key questions the program addresses are why in the 1950s and 1960s unemployment was systematically lower in Europe than in the United States and why for two and a half decades after 1980 unemployment has been systematically higher in Europe than in the United States In Two Questions about European Unemployment the answer is that Europe has stronger employment protection despite also having had more generous government supplied unemployment compensation While the institutional differences remained the same over this time period the microeconomic environment for workers changed with a higher risk of human capital depreciation in the 1980s 27 In 1997 he won the Nemmers Prize in Economics 28 In 2011 he was awarded the NAS Award for Scientific Reviewing from the National Academy of Sciences 29 and in September he became the recipient of the 2011 CME Group MSRI Prize in Innovative Quantitative Applications 30 Sargent is known as a devoted teacher Among his PhD advisees are men and women at the forefront of macroeconomic research who Sargent s reading group at Stanford and NYU is a famous institution among graduate students in economics 31 32 In 2016 Sargent helped found the non profit QuantEcon project which is dedicated to the development and documentation of modern open source computational tools for economics econometrics and decision making 33 Currently he is director of the Sargent Institute of Quantitative Economics and Finance SIQEF at Peking University HSBC Business School in Shenzhen 34 Nobel Prize Edit source source source source source source Interview with Thomas J Sargent after his Nobel lectureOn October 10 2011 Sargent with Christopher A Sims was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences The award cited their empirical research on cause and effect in the macroeconomy 35 His Nobel lecture United States Then Europe Now was delivered on December 11 2011 36 37 In popular culture EditHe is featured playing himself in a television commercial for Ally Financial in which he is asked if he can predict CD rates two years from now to which he simply answers No 38 Sargent is notable for making short speeches For example in 2007 his Berkeley graduation speech consumed 335 words 39 40 Selected publications EditSargent Thomas J 1971 A Note on the Accelerationist Controversy Journal of Money Credit and Banking 3 3 721 25 doi 10 2307 1991369 JSTOR 1991369 Sargent Thomas J amp Neil Wallace 1973 The Stability of Models of Money and Growth with Perfect Foresight Econometrica 41 6 1043 48 doi 10 2307 1914034 JSTOR 1914034 Sargent Thomas amp Wallace Neil 1975 Rational Expectations the Optimal Monetary Instrument and the Optimal Money Supply Rule Journal of Political Economy 83 2 241 54 doi 10 1086 260321 S2CID 154301791 Sargent Thomas amp Wallace Neil 1976 Rational Expectations and the Theory of Economic Policy PDF Journal of Monetary Economics 2 2 169 83 doi 10 1016 0304 3932 76 90032 5 Sargent Thomas J 1987 1979 Macroeconomic Theory New York Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 619750 1 Sargent Thomas J and Lars P Hansen 1980 Formulating and Estimating Dynamic Linear Rational Expectations Models PDF Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 2 1 7 46 doi 10 1016 0165 1889 80 90049 4 Sargent Thomas J amp Neil Wallace 1981 Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review 5 3 1 17 Sargent Thomas J 1983 The Ends of Four Big Inflations in Inflation Causes and Effects ed by Robert E Hall University of Chicago Press for the NBER 1983 pp 41 97 Sargent Thomas J 1987 Dynamic Macroeconomic Theory Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 21877 2 Sargent Thomas J and Albert Marcet 1989 Convergence of Least Squares Learning Mechanisms in Self Referential Linear Stochastic Models Journal of Economic Theory 48 2 337 68 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 89 90032 X Sargent Thomas J amp Albert Marcet 1989 Convergence of Least Squares Learning in Environments with Hidden State Variables and Private Information Journal of Political Economy 97 6 251 doi 10 1086 261603 S2CID 154864867 Sargent Thomas J amp Lars Ljungqvist 2000 Recursive Macroeconomic Theory MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 12274 0 Sargent Thomas J amp Lars Hansen 2001 Robust Control and Model Uncertainty American Economic Review 91 2 60 66 doi 10 1257 aer 91 2 60 References Edit NYU Bio Thomas J Sargent NYU Stern Retrieved 11 November 2022 NYU Bio Thomas J Sargent NYU Stern Retrieved 11 November 2022 Economist Rankings at IDEAS Ideas repec org Retrieved 2011 10 10 The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2011 Press release Nobel Prize 10 October 2011 Monrovia High grad wins Nobel Prize in economics Pasadena Star News 10 October 2011 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Sent Esther Mirjam 2006 The Evolving Rationality of Rational Expectations An Assessment of Thomas Sargent s Achievements Cambridge University Press p 35 ISBN 9780521027717 a b URL https www stern nyu edu faculty bio thomas sargent Book of Members 1780 2011 Chapter S PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 13 October 2011 Muth J F 1961 Rational Expectations and the Theory of Price Movements Econometrica 29 3 315 35 doi 10 2307 1909635 JSTOR 1909635 Galbacs Peter 2015 The Theory of New Classical Macroeconomics A Positive Critique Contributions to Economics Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 319 17578 2 ISBN 978 3 319 17578 2 Sargent Thomas J and Neil Wallace 1975 Rational Expectations the Optimal Monetary Instrument and the Optimal Money Supply Rule Journal of Political Economy 83 2 pp pp 241 54 Sargent T J 1981 Interpreting Economic Time Series PDF The Journal of Political Economy 89 2 213 48 doi 10 1086 260963 JSTOR 1833309 S2CID 152875567 Sargent Thomas J Wallace Neil 1976 Rational Expectations and the Theory of Economic Policy PDF Journal of Monetary Economics 2 2 169 83 doi 10 1016 0304 3932 76 90032 5 permanent dead link Sargent T J 1979 A note on maximum likelihood estimation of the rational expectations model of the term structure PDF Journal of Monetary Economics 5 133 35 doi 10 1016 0304 3932 79 90029 1 Sargent T J 1977 The Demand for Money during Hyperinflations under Rational Expectations I International Economic Review 18 1 59 82 doi 10 2307 2525769 JSTOR 2525769 Sargent T J Fand D Goldfeld S 1973 Rational Expectations the Real Rate of Interest and the Natural Rate of Unemployment Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1973 2 429 80 doi 10 2307 2534097 JSTOR 2534097 Sargent Thomas J amp Neil Wallace 1981 Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review 5 3 1 17 Sargent Thomas J 1983 The Ends of Four Big Inflations in Inflation Causes and Effects ed by Robert E Hall University of Chicago Press for the NBER 1983 p 41 97 Sargent T J Velde F O R 1995 Macroeconomic Features of the French Revolution The Journal of Political Economy 103 3 474 518 doi 10 1086 261992 S2CID 153904650 Sargent Thomas J 1992 Rational Expectations and Inflation Harper and Row ISBN 978 0 06 500280 5 Sargent Thomas J Velde F R 2003 The Big Problem of Small Change Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11635 8 Sargent Thomas J 1993 Bounded Rationality in Macroeconomics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 828869 5 Description and chapter preview 1st page links Marcet A 1989 Convergence of least squares learning mechanisms in self referential linear stochastic models 1 Journal of Economic Theory 48 2 337 68 doi 10 1016 0022 0531 89 90032 X a b Sargent Thomas J 1999 The Conquest of American Inflation Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00414 3 Hansen Lars Peter Sargent Thomas J 2008 Robustness Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11442 2 Lars Ljungqvist Archived from the original on 2011 12 29 Ljungqvist L Sargent T J 2008 Two Questions about European Unemployment Econometrica 76 1 doi 10 1111 j 0012 9682 2008 00816 x NYU Stern Thomas Sargent William R Berkley Professor of Economics and Business NAS Award for Scientific Reviewing National Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 18 March 2011 Retrieved 27 February 2011 2011 CME Group MSRI Prize Conference in Honor of Tom Sargent s Nobel Prize in Economics and Reading Group Reunion Videos of Reading Group Conference YouTube QuantEcon QuantEcon Retrieved 4 August 2017 Interview with Thomas Sargent on the PHD and Elite MA Programs at PHBS News Sargent Institute of Quantitative Economics of Finance The Prize in Economic Sciences 2011 Nobelprize org 2008 12 10 Retrieved 2011 10 10 Sargent Thomas J 2011 United States Then Europe Now Archived 2013 01 15 at the Wayback Machine AdWeek Economist Thomas J Sargent appears in ad for Ally Bank Tom Sargent Summarizes Economics Text of Berkeley Speech Archived 2014 08 11 at the Wayback MachineExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas J Sargent nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Thomas J Sargent Thomas J Sargent NYU Stern Sargent personal website Bloomberg News Nobels Give Econometrics Pioneers Their Due Thomas J Sargent on Nobelprize org nbsp Academic officesPreceded byGeorge Akerlof President of the American Economic Association2007 2008 Succeeded byAvinash DixitAwardsPreceded byPeter A DiamondDale T MortensenChristopher A Pissarides Laureate of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics2011 Served alongside Christopher A Sims Succeeded byAlvin E RothLloyd S Shapley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas J Sargent amp oldid 1161299424, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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