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Topic: Finn E. Kydland


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In the News (Thu 9 Jul 09)

  
 Finn E. Kydland - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Finn Kydland became interested in maths and economics as a young adult, after he did some bookkeeping at a friend's mink farm.
Kydland was a co-recipient of the 2004 Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (shared with Edward C. Prescott), "for their contributions to dynamic macroeconomics: the time consistency of economic policy and the driving forces behind business cycles".
Kydland grew up as the eldest of six siblings at the family farm in Søyland, Gjesdal, which is located in the Jæren farming region in Rogaland county, southwestern Norway.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Finn_E._Kydland

  
 Finn E. Kydland - Wikipedia
Finn E. Kydland (* Dezember 1943 in ÅlgÃ¥rd bei Stavanger) ist norwegischer ×konom.
Kydland und Prescott untersuchten warum sich Wirtschaft nicht gleichmäßig entwickelt, sondern Phasen des Aufschwungs immer wieder von Phasen der Rezession abgelöst werden.
Kydland ist Professor für Wirtschaftswissenschaften an der Tepper School of Business von Carnegie Mellon University und an der University of California Santa Barbara (Universität Kalifornien).
de.wikipedia.org /wiki/Finn_E._Kydland

  
 Finn E. Kydland - Wikipedia
Finn E. Kydland, född 1943, norsk nationalekonom, professor vid University of California at Santa Barbara, mottagare av Sveriges Riksbanks pris i ekonomisk vetenskap till Alfred Nobels minne 2004, delat med Edward C. Prescott, för "deras bidrag till dynamisk makroekonomisk teori: den ekonomiska politikens tidskonsistens och konjunkturens drivkrafter".
sv.wikipedia.org /wiki/Finn_E._Kydland

  
 MSN Encarta - Kydland, Finn E.
Kydland, Finn E. Kydland, Finn E., born in 1943, Nobel Prize -winning Norwegian economist noted for his contributions to the field of macroeconomics.
Kydland was particularly noted for his work with American economist Edward C. Prescott regarding factors that drive the business cycle and how changes in short-term economic policies can negatively impact long-term goals.
Prescott and Kydland countered that the business cycle is due to changes, or “shocks,” that affect supply, such as a sharp decrease in the oil supply, leading to recession, or a technological innovation that boosts productivity, leading to growth.
encarta.msn.com /encyclopedia_701702514/Kydland_Finn_E.html

  
 Finn E. Kydland - Wikipedia
Finn E. Kydland (født 1943) er norsk økonom, og kommer fra Gjesdal.
Den første internasjonale Wikimediakonferansen finner sted i Frankfurt 4.
no.wikipedia.org /wiki/Finn_E._Kydland

  
 Finn E. Kydland (1943-)
Kydland, Finn E and Prescott, Edward C, 1996.
Kydland, Finn E and Prescott, Edward C, 1982.
Kydland, Finn E and Prescott, Edward C, 1991.
www.eumed.net /cursecon/economistas/Kydland.htm

  
 readarticle.cgi?article=725
Kydland, a professor who is also on the faculty of Carnegie Mellon University, shares the prize with Edward Prescott, a professor at Arizona State University who spent one academic quarter in 2004 as a visiting professor at UCSB.
Kydland is the Henley Professor at the UCSB economics department.
Kydland is not teaching at UCSB yet, but will teach Economics 101, an intermediate class, to a lecture hall full of undergraduates starting in January.
www.goletavalleyvoice.com /cgi-bin/frontpage/readarticle.cgi?article=725

  
 2004 Nobel Prize Winners - Economics
Finn Kydland is the Henley Professor of Econmics at the University of California in Santa Barbara.
Kydland and Prescott point out that the contribution by the hours worked by a brain surgeon are not the same as that of a porter in a hospital.
Kydland and Prescott refer to the work of Robert Solow, who himself won a Nobel Prize in Economics, who developed a theory of economic growth that has come to be used widely in relation to developing countries.
www.bized.ac.uk /learn/economics/nobel/2004.htm

  
 Economy
Kydland and Prescott showed that many qualitative features of actual business cycles, such as the co-movements of central macroeconomic variables and their relative variabilities, can be generated by a model based on supply (technology) shocks.
Finn Kidland of Norway and Edward Prescott of USA jointly won this year’s Nobel Prize for Economics for their research that integrates the theory of business cycles with the theory of economic growth.
Kydland and Prescott showed that this challenging analysis could be carried out in practice by extensive use of numerical methods.
www.nepalnews.com /contents/englishmonthly/businessage/2004/nov/economy.htm

  
 Vox Baby: In Praise of Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott
The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2004 was awarded to Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott "for their contributions to dynamic macroeconomics: the time consistency of economic policy and the driving forces behind business cycles." Congratulations to both of them on the well deserved recognition.
In Praise of Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott
Kydland and Prescott's work shows why policy makers should behave in a consistent manner whenever possible, even though they will have to pass up opportunities to confiscate revenue or manipulate economic outcomes in the short term.
voxbaby.blogspot.com /2004/10/in-praise-of-finn-kydland-and-edward.html

  
 University economists share Nobel The San Diego Union-Tribune
Kydland, who is on a brief visit to Norway, told The Associated Press that he learned about the prize while lecturing students at the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration in Bergen.
Kydland is the third Norwegian to win the prize, joining Ragnar Frisch who won it in 1969 and Trygve Haavelmo, who won in 1989.
Kydland, 60, teaches at Carnegie Mellon and at the University of California at Santa Barbara.
www.signonsandiego.com /uniontrib/20041012/news_1b12nobel.html

  
 Carnegie Mellon's Tepper School of Business' Finn Kydland Wins 2004 Nobel Prize in Economics
Kydland is currently on a teaching leave of absence at University of California, Santa Barbara.
Kydland was recognized for his achievements and contributions to macroeconomics.
Kydland and Prescott are the fifth and sixth business school faculty members to receive this prestigious distinction.
www.prnewswire.com /cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/10-11-2004/0002272367&EDATE=

  
 Aftenposten Norway, Norwegian news in English
Finn E Kydland, who teaches at universities in both Norway and the US, is only the third Norwegian to win the prestigious award ever.
Kydland and Prescott received the award for their work showing that the driving forces behind business cycle fluctuations and the design of economic policy are key areas in macroeconomic research.
Kydland is on the faculty at Handelshøyskole in Bergen at but also teaches at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and at the University of Southern California at Santa Barbara.
www.aftenposten.no /english/local/article888576.ece

  
 CMU professor shares Nobel for economics
Kydland, who is on a brief visit to his native Norway, said that he learned about the prize while lecturing students at the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration in Bergen.
Kydland has spent most of his career at CMU, but is currently on leave and since July has held the Jeff Henley endowed chair in economics at the University of California Santa Barbara.
Kydland's and Prescott's concept of a "time consistency problem" showed how individuals anticipate government actions and make decisions of their own that often end up leading away from the government's objectives.
www.post-gazette.com /pg/04286/394367.stm

  
 Kydland and Prescott
Finn Kydland and Ed Prescott are widely recognized as the intellectual leaders of the real business cycle approach to macroeconomics.
Kydland and Prescott's "...Time to Build..." was an attempt to study the extent to which the business cycle can be explained as the ordinary working of a competitive economy subject to random technology shocks.
Kydland and Prescott are responsible for pioneering a second major area of economic research.
levine.sscnet.ucla.edu /general/kp.htm

  
 Professor Wins Nobel Prize in Economics - Daily Nexus Online
Kydland and Edward Prescott of ASU were awarded the honor for their research on business cycles and macroeconomic policy, and the two will share the $1.3 million prize equally.
UCSB professor of economics Henning Bohn hired Kydland in July, and Kydland is the Jeff Henley Chair in Economics at the university.
Kydland was in Norway giving a lecture at the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration when the announcement came and was not available for comment.
www.ucsbdailynexus.com /news/2004/7984.html

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Kydland Finn E
Kydland, Finn E. Kydland, Finn E., born in 1943, Nobel Prize-winning Norwegian economist noted for his contributions to the field of macroeconomics.
Search for Magazine Articles on " Kydland Finn E "
Its form was derived without alteration from the fifth letter of the...
encarta.msn.com /Kydland_Finn_E.html

  
 UCSB Praises Newest Laureate - Daily Nexus Online
Kydland, who was hired by UCSB in July, shares the 2004 Nobel Prize in Economics with Edward Prescott of Arizona State University.
Kydland said he is excited to return to Santa Barbara and begin teaching.
Kydland and Prescott conducted the research that won them the Nobel Prize several years ago.
www.ucsbdailynexus.com /print_article.php?a=8002

  
 Boston.com / News / World / Europe / Norwegian, American Win Nobel Economics Prize
Finn Kydland of Norway and Edward Prescott of the United States won the Nobel economics prize Monday for research that laid the groundwork for more independent central banks and explained business cycles.
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Finn Kydland of Norway and Edward Prescott of the United States won the Nobel economics prize Monday for research that laid the groundwork for more independent central banks and explained business cycles.
Kydland, who teaches at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of California, Santa Barbara, said fellow professors had joked about him getting the prize, "but I never paid any attention to it and I certainly was not prepared that anything would happen today."
www.boston.com /news/world/europe/articles/2004/10/11/kydland_and_prescott_win_nobel_economics_prize?mode=PF

  
 The Hindu : Business : Prize winning theory on government policies
Kydland teaches at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and the University of California at Santa Barbara, while Prescott, 63, is at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona, and part of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Kydland is the third Norwegian to win the prize, joining Ragnar Frisch who won it in 1969 and Trygve Haavelmo, who won in 1989.
Kydland told the AP that he learned he won the prize while lecturing students at the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration in Bergen, Norway.
www.hinduonnet.com /2004/10/12/stories/2004101203361400.htm

  
 Edward C. Prescott: One on One Interview
He and Finn Kydland, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University and at the University of California, Santa Barbara, won the 2004 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for their contributions to dynamic macroeconomics — namely, their work on the theory of economic policy and their research on the causes of business cycles.
Finn and I accepted the critique and set to work developing a control procedure that is consistent with dynamic economic theory.
That includes Finn and me. But we were influenced by Ragnar Frisch, who stressed the importance of a propagation mechanism for cyclical fluctuations, and there was not a monetary shock propagation mechanism that resulted in the economy displaying the business cycle facts.
www.fenews.com /fen41/one_on_one/one_on_one.html

  
 Finn E. Kydland - Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre et gratuite
Finn E. Kydland, né en 1943, est un économiste norvégien.
Kydland est licencié ès Sciences de l'école d'économie de Norvège (NHH) en 1968 et obtint un doctorat de l'université Carnegie Mellon en 1973.
Les domaines de recherche de Kydland sont l'économie en général et l' économie politique.
fr.wikipedia.org /wiki/Finn_E._Kydland

  
 UB PRESENTERER: Nobelprisvinnerne
Mer informasjon finnes på Kydlands og Prescotts hjemmesider.
Nordmannen Finn E. Kydland (60), er ansatt ved Carnegie Mellon University i Pittsburgh og University of California i Santa Barbara, mens amerikaneren Edward C. Prescott (63) jobber som professor ved Arizona State University i Tempe.
Kydland was teaching at the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration when an assistant interrupted the lecture to inform him he won the prize, said Torsten Persson, chairman of the prize committee, at a press conference.
www.ub.uit.no /fag/okonomi/nobelpris.htm

  
 Finn Kydland dan Edward Prescott Raih Hadiah Nobel Ekonomi 2004 Ensiklopedi Tokoh Indonesia
Juri The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences 2004 memenang-kan Finn E Kydland (Norwegia) dan Edward Prescott (AS) meraih hadiah Nobel Ekonomi 2004.
Kydland dan Prescott mencoba memberi jawaban, faktor apa yang kira-kira luput itu.
Kydland dan Prescott telah memberi kontribusi mendasar di dua area itu.
www.e-ti.com /aneka/nobel/ekonomi/2004/index.shtml

  
 The Prize in Economic Sciences 2004 - Press Release
Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott have made fundamental contributions to these areas of great significance, not only for macroeconomic analysis, but also for the practice of monetary and fiscal policy in many countries.
Kydland and Prescott's results offered a common explanation for events that, until then, had been interpreted as separate policy failures, e.g., that economies become trapped in high inflation even though price stability is the stated objective of monetary policy.
Whereas earlier research had emphasized macroeconomic shocks on the demand side of the economy, Kydland and Prescott demonstrated that shocks on the supply side may have far-reaching effects.
nobelprize.org /economics/laureates/2004/press.html

  
 UCSB Nobel Laureates
Kydland won the prize jointly with Edward C. Prescott of Arizona State University, who was a visiting professor at UCSB in winter quarter 2004, when he held the Maxwell and Mary Pellish Chair in Economics.
Professor Kydland joined the UCSB faculty in July, 2004, when he was appointed to the Jeff Henley Chair in Economics.
Kydland has published more than 50 papers, two of which have been cited more than 1,500 times.
www.ucsb.edu /nobel/index.shtml

  
 Economics Roundtable
Finn E. Kydland and Edward C. Prescott win the Nobel Prize in Economics & their contributions to dynamic macroeconomics: the time consistency of economic policy and the driving forces behind business cycles".
www.economicsroundtable.com

  
 Study abroad at Macquarie University Sydney Australia
Finn Kydland (61) was giving a lecture at NHH (the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration, one of Macquarie’s partner institutions in Norway) in Bergen, his alma mater, on Monday 11 October when his lecture was interrupted.
Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott have made a major contribution in the area of research on macroeconomics, having analysed in an innovative way the design of economic policy and the driving forces behind business cycles.
Eleven years ago Finn E. Kydland received a position as adjunct professor at NHH to lecture graduate students twice a year in addition to his post as professor at University of California, Santa Barbara.
www.international.mq.edu.au /staffNews.asp?itemID=387

  
 CMU economist, mentor share Nobel - PittsburghLIVE.com
Kydland, a Norwegian native, is on a leave of absence from the University of California at Santa Barbara, where he is a visiting professor, and is currently in Norway.
Both Kydland, 60, of Fox Chapel, and Prescott, 63, an economics professor at Arizona State University, received their doctorates from what is now the Tepper School.
Kydland is a Steelers fan whose favorite player is Jan Stenerud, the last Norwegian player in the National Football League.
www.pittsburghlive.com /x/tribune-review/trib/regional/s_260855.html

  
 Selected Dallas Fed Research by Finn Kydland - What's New Archive - News & Events - FRB Dallas
I've known Finn Kydland since I joined the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas in 1994.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas congratulates Finn E. Kydland, who has been awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in economics, jointly with Edward Prescott of Arizona State University and the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.
Kydland, a faculty member at the University of California, Santa Barbara, has served as a research associate in the Research Department at the Dallas Fed since 1994.
www.dallasfed.org /news/whatsnew/kydland.html

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