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Kevin M. Murphy

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Kevin Miles Murphy is the George J. Stigler Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business and a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution.

In 1997 Murphy was awarded the prestigious John Bates Clark Medal by the American Economic Association, given once every two years to the most outstanding American economist under the age of forty, and widely considered to be the second most prestigious prize in economics (after the Nobel Prize in Economics). Murphy was cited for his study of the causes of growing income inequality between white-collar and blue-collar workers in the United States and his research linking the growth in income inequality to growth in the demand for skilled labor. His other research has covered such topics as economic growth, income inequality, valuing medical research, rational addiction, and unemployment.

Murphy has authored over 50 published articles on a variety of topics including a cost-benefit analysis of the war in Iraq.[1]

On September 20, 2005, he was named as one of the 2005 recipients of the MacArthur Fellowship, often referred to as the "genius grant."

Education: B.A. (economics, Phi Beta Kappa), University of California, Los Angeles, 1981; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1986 (thesis: Specialization and Human Capital).

Major works

  • Measuring the Gains from Medical Research: An Economic Approach (edited volume with Robert H. Topel) University of Chicago Press , 2003.
  • Social Economics: Market Behavior in a Social Environment (with Gary S. Becker). Cambridge , MA : Harvard University Press (The Belknap Press), 2000.

References

External links