Jerry A. Hausman

Jerry A. Hausman
Born (1946-05-05) May 5, 1946 (age 78)
NationalityAmerican
Academic career
FieldEconometrics
InstitutionMIT
Alma materNuffield College, Oxford (Ph.D.)
Brown University (B.A.)
Doctoral
students
Halbert White
Roger H. Gordon[1]
Whitney K. Newey[2]
Andrew Lo
Jeffrey R. Kling[3]
Yacine Ait-Sahalia[4]
ContributionsHausman specification test
AwardsJohn Bates Clark Medal (1985)
Frisch Medal (1980)
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Jerry Allen Hausman (born May 5, 1946) is the John and Jennie S. MacDonald Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a notable econometrician. He has published numerous influential papers in microeconometrics. Hausman is the recipient of several prestigious awards including the John Bates Clark Medal in 1985 and the Frisch Medal in 1980.

He is perhaps most well known for his development of the Durbin–Wu–Hausman test.

He has done extensive work in the field of telecommunications, and is also recognized as an expert on antitrust and mergers, public finance and taxation, and regulation. Hausman also serves as the director of the MIT Telecommunications Economics Research Program.

His recent applied papers are on topics including the effect of new goods on economic welfare and their measurement in the CPI, new telecommunications technologies including cellular 3G and broadband, regulation of telecommunications and railroads, and competition in network markets. His recent econometrics papers include estimation of difference in difference models, semi-parametric duration models, mixed logit model, weak instruments, and errors in variables in non-standard situations.

Hausman received his B.A. from Brown University summa cum laude in 1968, and his Ph.D. from Nuffield College, Oxford University, where he was a Marshall Scholar, in 1973,[5] with thesis titled Theoretical and empirical aspects of vintage capital models.[6]

  1. ^ Gordon, Roger Hall (1976). Essays on the causes and equitable treatment of differences in earnings and ability (Ph.D.). MIT. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  2. ^ Specification testing and estimation using a generalized method of moments
  3. ^ Kling, Jeffrey Richard (1998). Identifying causal effects of public policies (Ph.D.). MIT. hdl:1721.1/10114.
  4. ^ Nonparametric functional estimation with applications to financial models
  5. ^ Jerry A. Hausman at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. ^ "Theoretical and empirical aspects of vintage capital models". British Library EThOS. Retrieved 17 May 2013.