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  1. 10. Okt. 2011 · Ökonomen wie Christopher Sims und Thomas Sargent widersprechen. Nun ehrt das Nobelpreiskomitee die US-Forscher - und setzt damit ein beachtliches Zeichen. Hamburg - Der Vorwurf ist nicht neu ...

  2. Thomas Sargent. Thomas "Tom" John Sargent ( Pasadena, 19 de julho de 1943) é um economista norte-americano e co-galardoado com Christopher A. Sims) com o Prémio de Ciências Económicas em Memória de Alfred Nobel. É especialista nas áreas da macroeconomia, economia monetária e séries temporais em econometria. É tido por "um dos líderes ...

  3. Thomas J. Sargent. Thomas J. Sargent, winner of the 2011 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, is a recognized leader in the field of macroeconomics working on monetary and fiscal economics and applied time series analysis. He shared the Nobel Prize with Princeton's Christopher Sims for “empirical research on cause and effect in the macroeconomy.”.

  4. hetwebsite.net › het › profilesHET: Thomas Sargent

    Thomas J. Sargent, 1943-New Classical macroeconomist. Thomas Sargent took a leading part in the "Rational Expectations" revolution of the 1970s. Obtaining his B.A. at Berkeley and his Ph.D. Harvard, Thomas Sargent became joined the faculty at the University of Minnesota in 1971, where he composed most of his path-breaking articles, often in collaboration with Neil Wallace.

  5. Né en 1943 à Pasadena (États-Unis), Thomas Sargent est un économiste américain et l'un des représentants de l'école des nouveaux classiques, critique à l'égard de l'intervention de l'Etat. Détenteur d'un doctorat de l'Université de Harvard, il débute sa carrière à l'Université du Minnesota. Depuis 2002, il est professeur d ...

  6. Thomas J. Sargent delivered his Prize Lecture on 8 December 2011 at Aula Magna, Stockholm University. He was introduced by Professor Per Krusell, Chairman of the Economic Sciences Prize Committee. He was introduced by Professor Per Krusell, Chairman of the Economic Sciences Prize Committee.

  7. Math courses for Stanford students. These courses listed above are very useful courses for applied work in econometrics, macroeconomic theory, and applied industrial organization. They describe the foundations of methods used to specify and estimate dynamic competitive models. Just as in jogging, I recommend not overdoing it.