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  1. Matthew Rabin is one of the most important names in behavioral economics. Beginning his academic career in the 1990s, Rabin has consistently been an open advocate for behavioral economics. He understands that traditional economics, whilst having its uses, is still severely limited when it comes to explaining how people actually act instead of how they should act according to rationality.

  2. There are no comments for this article. In Honor of Matthew Rabin: Winner of the John Bates Clark Medal by Colin Camerer and Richard H. Thaler. Published in volume 17, issue 3, pages 159-176 of Journal of Economic Perspectives, Summer 2003, Abstract: Although there is some evidence that Matthew Rabin existed before 1990, we had the pleasu...

  3. By MATTHEW RABIN* People like to help those who are helping them, and to hurt those who are hurting them. Outcomes reflecting such motivations are called fairness equilib-ria. Outcomes are mutual-max when each person maximizes the other's material payoffs, and mutual-min when each person minimizes the other's payoffs. It is

  4. If you are less confident a meeting would help, or if you have urgent business and none of the existing appointments work, please send me an e-mail at matthewrabin@fas.harvard.edu. Sign-up meetings are primarily for research advising and coursework, but PhD students in economics or affiliated programs should feel free to sign up to discuss ...

  5. Press coverage: none. "Projection Bias in Predicting Future Utility" (with George Loewenstein and Ted O'Donoghue), Quarterly Journal of Economics 118 (4), November 2003, 1209-1248. Press coverage: none. "The Nobel Memorial Prize for Daniel Kahneman" Scandanavian Journal of Economics 105 (2): 157-280, 2003.

  6. Matthew Rabin Matthew Rabin. Harvard University. Contact. MatthewRabin@fas.harvard.edu; About this author at RePEc. Address. Department of Economics Littauer Center M-8 Harvard University Cambridge, MA 02138 Tel: (510) 643-8622. National Bureau of Economi ...

  7. Working Papers. "Expectations-Based Loss Aversion May Help Explain Seemingly Dominated Choices in Strategy-Proof Mechanisms" (with Bnaya Dreyfuss and Ori Heffetz), October 2019. Abstract. Press coverage: none. " Moral Preferences, Moral Constraints, and Self-Serving Biases ," This is a digitally remastered (in June 2019, using visible, modern ...