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Bernheim: Microeconomics 1e
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Microeconomics

B. Douglas Bernheim, Stanford University
Michael D. Whinston, Northwestern University

ISBN: 007290027x
Copyright year: 2008

About the Authors



B. Douglas Bernheim B. Douglas Bernheim graduated with an A.B. in Economics from Harvard University, Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa, in 1979. He entered graduate study at M.I.T. under a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, and completed his Ph.D. three years later. He began his academic career at Stanford University from 1982– 1987. He left Stanford in 1988 to assume an endowed chair in the Department of Finance at Northwestern University’s J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management. In 1990, he moved to Princeton University, where he held an endowed chair in the Department of Economics, and also served as the Co-Director of the Center for Economic Policy Studies. He returned to Stanford in 1994, and is now the Edward Ames Edmonds Professor of Economics.

Professor Bernheim’s work has spanned a number of fields, including public economics, political economy, game theory, contract theory, behavioral economics, industrial organization, and financial economics. He is a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, a Senior Fellow of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), and Co-Director of SIEPR’s Tax and Budget Policy Program. He is also a former Director of the Stanford Institute for Theoretical Economics, and Co-Editor of the American Economic Review.

Professor Bernheim’s teaching has included Principles of Economics, Intermediate Microeconomics, Public Economics, Microeconomic Theory, Industrial Organization, Behavioral Economics, and Insurance and Risk Management.

 

Michael D. Whinston Michael D. Whinston is the Robert E. and Emily H. King Professor of Business Institutions in the Department of Economics at Northwestern University. He also holds appointments at Northwestern’s School of Law and its Kellogg Graduate School of Management. Whinston received his B.S. and M.B.A. from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and his Ph.D. from M.I.T. He taught at Harvard from 1984–1997 before moving to Northwestern. His research has covered a variety of topics in microeconomics, including game theory, the design of contracts and organizations, firm behavior in oligopolistic markets, antitrust, and law and economics. He has also conducted empirical research on the airline and pharmaceutical industries, and served as a consultant—for private parties, the government, and the court—in various antitrust cases. Whinston is a co-author of the leading graduate textbook in microeconomics, Microeconomic Theory [Oxford University Press, 1995], and is also the author of Lectures on Antitrust Economics [MIT Press, 2006]. He and Doug Bernheim have collaborated since 1983, and are excited about bringing this collaboration to producing an innovative new microeconomics text for undergraduates.


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