Joseph Stiglitz (born February 9, 1943) is an American economist. He is a recipient of the John Bates Clark Medal (1979) and the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (2001). Former Senior Vice President and Chief Economist of the World Bank, he is famous for his critical view of globalization and international institutions like the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank. In 2000 Stiglitz founded the Initiative for Policy Dialogue (IPD), a think tank on international development based at Columbia University. Since 2001 he has been a member of the Columbia faculty, and has held the rank of University Professor since 2003. He also advises the University of Manchester's World Poverty Institute.
In addition to making numerous influential contributions to microeconomics, Stiglitz has played a number of policy roles. He served in the Clinton Administration as the chair of the President's Council of Economic Advisors (1995 – 1997). At the World Bank, he served as Senior Vice President and Chief Economist (1997 – 2000), in the time when unprecedented protest against international economic organizations started, most prominently with the Seattle WTO meeting of 1999.
Stiglitz always had a poor relationship with Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers. In 2000 Summers successfully petitioned for Stiglitz's removal, supposedly in exchange for World Bank President James Wolfensohn's re-appointment - an exchange that Wolfensohn denies took place. Whether Summers ever made such a blunt demand is questionable - Wolfensohn claims he would "have told him to fuck himself" (Mallaby, The World's Banker, p266).
Stiglitz promptly resigned his post as chief Economics advisor but stayed on as 'Special advisor to the President'. In this role, he continued criticism of the IMF, and, by implication, the US treasury department. In April 2000, in an article for the New Republic, he wrote on the IMF :
The article was published a week before the annual meetings of the World Bank and IMF and provoked a strong response. It proved too strong for Summers, yet more lethally, Stiglitz's protector-of-sorts at the World Bank, Wolfensohn. Wolfensohn had privately empathised with Stiglitz's views, yet this time he had gone too far. Wolfensohn, worried for his second term - which Summers had threatened to veto - and with it, his Nobel Peace prize, had little other option left. Stiglitz was fired by Wolfensohn (see US Hegemony and the World Bank, p222-223, by Wade in 2002, Review of the International Political Economy).
In July 2000 Stiglitz founded the Initiative for Policy Dialogue (IPD) to help developing countries explore policy alternatives, and enable wider civic participation in economic policymaking.
Stiglitz' most famous research was on screening, a technique used by one economic agent to extract otherwise private information from another. It was for this contribution to the theory of information asymmetries that he shared the Nobel prize with George A. Akerlof and A. Michael Spence.
Along with his technical economic publications, Stiglitz is the author of Whither Socialism, a non-mathematical book providing an introduction to the theories behind economic socialism's failure in Eastern Europe, the role of imperfect information in markets, and misconceptions about how truly "free market" the free market capitalist system is. In 2002, he wrote Globalization and Its Discontents, where he asserts that the International Monetary Fund puts the interest of "its largest shareholder," the United States, above those of the poorer nations it was designed to serve. Stiglitz offers some reasons why globalization has engendered the hostility of protesters, such as those at Seattle and Genoa. This book sold over a million copies worldwide and was translated into more than 30 languages.
In 2003, Stiglitz published The Roaring Nineties, his analysis of the boom and bust of the 1990s. In 2004 he published "New Paradigm for Monetary Economics" (Cambridge University Press) and in 2005, Oxford University Press published his book "Fair Trade for All." Norton and Penguin will bring out "Making Globalization Work" in September, 2006.
Online access to his published papers at his own website
1943 births | American economists | Anti-globalization writers | Columbia University alumni | Debaters | Fellows of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge | Fellows of All Souls College, Oxford | Jewish American writers | Living people | Members and associates of the US National Academy of Sciences | Nobel Prize in Economics winners | United States Council of Economic Advisors | World Bank Chief Economists
জোসেফ স্টিগ্লিট্স | Джоузеф Щиглиц | Joseph E. Stiglitz | Joseph Stiglitz | Joseph E. Stiglitz | Joseph Eugene Stiglitz | Joseph E. Stiglitz | Joseph E. Stiglitz | ג'וזף שטיגליץ | Џозеф Стиглиц | Joseph Eugene Stiglitz | ジョセフ・E・スティグリッツ | Joseph E. Stiglitz | Joseph E. Stiglitz | Стиглиц, Джозеф Юджин | Joseph Stiglitz
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