Sendhil Mullainathan

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Sendhil Muillainathan
File:Mullainathan sendhil download 2.jpg
Born c. 1973 (age 50–51)
Tamil Nadu, India
Residence United States
Nationality United States, India
Fields economics, behavioral economics
Institutions Harvard University 2004–
MIT 1999-2004
Alma mater Harvard University Ph.D, 1998
Cornell University B.A., 1993
Doctoral advisor Drew Fudenberg
Lawrence Katz
Andrei Shleifer
Known for Behavioral Economics
Development Economics
Corporate Finance
Notable awards MacArthur Fellow

Sendhil Mullainathan (செந்தில் முல்லைநாதன்) (Audio file "Sendhil Mullainathan Pronunciation.ogg" not found) (born c. 1973) is a Professor of Economics at Harvard University, and the author of Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much[1] (with Eldar Shafir). He was hired with tenure by Harvard in 2004 after having spent six years at MIT. He is a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation "genius grant" and conducts research on development economics, behavioral economics, and corporate finance. He is co-founder of ideas42, a non-profit organization that uses behavioral science to help solve social problems, and J-PAL, the MIT Poverty Action Lab. He has made extensive academic contributions with the including the National Bureau for Economic Research (NBER), and has also worked in government with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CPFB).

Early life and career

Born in a small farming village in India[citation needed], Mullainathan moved to the Los Angeles area at age seven[citation needed]. He received his B.A. in computer science, mathematics, and economics from Cornell University in 1993[citation needed], and completed his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University 1993-1998[citation needed].

Research contributions

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Professor Mullainathan has made substantial contributions to the field of behavioral economics. He has also made innovative additions to the literature on development topics, such as discrimination, corruption, and corporate governance.

The 2013 piece “Poverty Impedes Cognitive Function" [2] published in Science Magazine, compared farmers’ performance on intelligence tests in the bleak and stressful days before harvest, to the period of abundance following the sale of produce. Remarkably, the same farmer shows diminished cognitive performance before harvest, when poor, as compared with after harvest, when rich. The controlled study found that the stress associated with poverty impeded other behaviors.

As a research associate with NBER, he produced numerous papers that link behavioral science and economics. The 2002 paper, “Do Cigarette Taxes Make Smokers Happier",[3] written together with Jonathan Gruber (economist), found an improvement in smokers’ psychological state when cigarette taxes were hiked to provide disincentive to buy cigarettes.

A December 2007 paper studies corruption in obtaining driving licenses in Delhi, India.[4] On the average, individuals pay about twice the official amount to obtain a license and very few take the legally required driving test, resulting in many unqualified yet licensed drivers. The magnitude of distortions in the allocation of licenses increases with citizens’ willing to pay for licenses. These results support the view that corruption does not merely reflect transfers from citizens to bureaucrats but that it distorts allocation. The paper also shows that partial anti-corruption measures have only a limited impact because players in this system adapt to the new environment. Specifically, a ban on agents at one regional transport office is associated with a high percentage of unqualified drivers overcoming the residency requirement and obtaining licenses at other license offices.

The 2004 study utilized a simple technique to measure labor market discrimination: switch the names at the top of resumes.[5] Controlling for other factors, Mullainathan and his co-authors found that applications with African-American sounding names attained 50% fewer callbacks. The experiment provides convincing evidence of implicit discrimination in hiring practices.

In collaboration with Marianne Bertrand, Mullainathan published a series of papers scrutinizing executive compensation. The studies explain that increasing financial reward for CEO performance is a more complicated matter than incentive. Factors may enable CEOs to gain from luck, manipulating committees (the Skimming Model), and decreased sector competition.[6][7][8]

Selected bibliography

Books

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Journal articles

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Papers

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References

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  2. Mani, Anandi, Sendhil Mullainathan, Eldar Shafir, and Jiaying Zhao. 2013. Poverty Impedes Cognitive Function. science 341, no. 6149: 976-980.
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External links