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Nicholas Kiefer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nicholas M. Kiefer
CitizenshipUnited States
Academic career
InstitutionCornell University
University of Chicago
Alma materPrinceton University
Florida State University
Doctoral
advisor
Richard E. Quandt
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Nicholas M. Kiefer (February 28, 1951 – March 12, 2024)[1] was an Economics professor at Cornell University. He received a fellowship award from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in 1986 for his "past achievements and ... promise of future accomplishments".[2]

Kiefer wrote graduate textbooks and monographs in econometrics, including textbooks on job-search econometrics (Empirical Labor Economics: The Search Approach with T. J. Devine and Search Models and Applied Labor Economics with G.R. Neumann). He wrote a textbook on the micro-econometrics of agents solving dynamic problems (Economic Modeling and Inference with B. J. Christensen).

References

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  1. ^ "Nicholas Kiefer, economist and 'towering intellect,' dies at 73". Cornell Chronicle. Retrieved 2024-09-10.
  2. ^ "272 to Share $5.9 Million in Guggenheim Awards". The New York Times. 13 April 1986. p. 53. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
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