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  1. George Arthur Akerlof (born June 17, 1940) is an American economist and a university professor at the McCourt School of Public Policy at Georgetown University and Koshland Professor of Economics Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley.

  2. Learn about the life and achievements of George A. Akerlof, the American economist who won the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 2001 for his analysis of markets with asymmetric information. Read his biography, family background, education, and career highlights.

  3. Nov 14, 2003 · A personal and interpretive essay by the laureate who wrote "The Market for 'Lemons'" in 1966-67. He describes the origins and history of his paper, which deals with asymmetric information and market failures, and how it fits into the transition of economic theory from the 1960s to the 1990s.

  4. About George A. Akerlof. George Akerlof was educated at Yale and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received his PhD in 1966, the same year he became an assistant professor at Berkeley.

  5. George Akerlof is an American economist who won the Nobel Prize for his analysis of markets with asymmetric information. He studied at Yale and MIT, and taught at the University of California, Berkeley.

  6. Jun 12, 2024 · George A. Akerlof (born June 17, 1940, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.) is an American economist who, with A. Michael Spence and Joseph E. Stiglitz, won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2001 for laying the foundation for the theory of markets with asymmetric information.

  7. Sep 7, 2022 · Learn about George Akerlof, a New Keynesian economist and Nobel laureate for his theory of markets under asymmetric information. Find out his early life, education, books, and contributions to identity economics and the fair wage-effort hypothesis.