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  1. Peter Arthur Diamond (born April 29, 1940) is an American economist known for his analysis of U.S. Social Security policy and his work as an advisor to the Advisory Council on Social Security in the late 1980s and 1990s.

  2. Peter Diamond is an Institute Professor Emeritus at MIT, where he taught from 1966 to 2011. He first consulted to Congress about Social Security reform in 1974. He has analyzed pension systems in many countries.

  3. Peter Arthur Diamond (29 de abril de 1940) es un economista estadounidense. Conocido por su análisis de la política de la Seguridad Social estadounidense y su trabajo como consejero en el Consejo Consultivo sobre la Seguridad Social a finales de los años 1980 y principios de los 1990. Es profesor de economía en el MIT.

    • Estadounidense
    • Nueva York y Massachusetts
    • Peter A. Diamond
  4. Diamond family, Matt, Peter, Kate, Andy, Stockholm, December 10, 2010.. For my second foray into changing the theory, rather than asking whether a process could be found that would converge to a standard competitive equilibrium, I decided to look for the allocation to which a plausible process would converge.

    • Peter A. Diamond1
    • Peter A. Diamond2
    • Peter A. Diamond3
    • Peter A. Diamond4
    • Peter A. Diamond5
  5. Peter A. Diamond. The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2010. Born: 29 April 1940, New York, NY, USA. Affiliation at the time of the award: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, USA. Prize motivation: “for their analysis of markets with search frictions” Prize share: 1/3. Work.

  6. 3 de may. de 2024 · Peter A. Diamond (born April 29, 1940, New York City, N.Y., U.S.) is an American economist who was a corecipient, with Dale T. Mortensen and Christopher A. Pissarides, of the 2010 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences “for their analysis of markets with search frictions.”

  7. 11 de oct. de 2010 · Peter A. Diamond PhD '63, Institute Professor and professor of economics at MIT, has won the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for 2010. Diamond has received the award along with two co-winners, Dale T. Mortensen of Northwestern University and Christopher A. Pissarides of the London School of Economics.