- David Colander
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David Charles Colander Born November 1947 (age 63) Nationality American Field Macroeconomics Information at IDEAS/RePEc David C. Colander is the Christian A. Johnson Distinguished Professor of Economics at Middlebury College. He is known for his study of the economics profession itself, and the sociology of economics. His books The Making of an Economist and its later edition, The Making of an Economist, Redux, have been called "essential reading for prospective graduate students".[1] He has authored over 35 books and 100 articles on a wide variety of subjects.[2] On IDEAS, he is listed in the top 5% of authors in a number of categories.[3] He has expressed interest in complexity economics.[4] His latest work focuses on economic education, complexity, and the methodology appropriate to applied policy economics.
Professor Colander received his Ph.D. from Columbia University and has taught at Columbia University, Vassar College, the University of Miami, and Princeton University as well as Middlebury College. In 2001-2002 he was the Kelley Professor for Distinguished Teaching at Princeton University. He has been president of both the Eastern Economic Association and History of Economic Thought Society and is, or has been, on the editorial boards of numerous journals, including Journal of Economic Perspectives and the Journal of Economic Education. He has also been a consultant to Time-Life Films, a consultant to Congress, a Brookings Policy Fellow, and a Visiting Scholar at Nuffield College, Oxford. He is listed in Who's Who?, Who's Who in Education?, etc.[5]
In an article entitled "Confessions of an Economic Gadfly", Colander relayed the story of his progression as an economist. He states that he is inspired by the "Yeah criterion" – intuitive explanations that seem to fit. He also discusses the influence of mathematics on economics and his career. He says that he is not an "ultramathematician", and is comfortable taking an intuitive approach to economic ideas. Thus he did not favor what he called "the MIT approach" of formalism. He believes that the MIT approach limits one's intuition, and recollects encountering colleagues who an example of a colleague who refused to discuss economic ideas without formal models. Despite Colander's aversion to simplified formal models, he began his career working on a mathematical project. He got his break, however, when he collaborated with Abba P. Lerner on a book. After that, he was able to publish in certain journals. He began to write textbooks, and since then his recognition has grown to the point where he turns down invitations to speak, and tries to focus his publications in areas where his ideas are less well-known.[6]
References
- ^ Princeton University Press. The Making of an Economist, Redux. Publisher review.
- ^ Biography
- ^ Colander IDEAS profile.
- ^ David Colander. Complexity and the History of Economic Thought. Middlebury College Working Paper Series.
- ^ [1]. David C. Colander.
- ^ David Colander. Confessions of an Economic Gadfly. In Passion and Craft. pp. 39 – 55.
External links
Categories:- American economists
- Middlebury College faculty
- 1947 births
- Living people
- Columbia University alumni
- Princeton University faculty
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