Education
University of Minnesota, Ph.D. in Economics and B.S. in Physics |
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Biography
Professor McFadden, recipient of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Economics, is the E. Morris Cox Professor of Economics at the University of California at Berkeley and was previously the James R. Killian Professor of Economics at MIT. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for his numerous contributions to quantitative economic science and, in particular, his pioneering theoretical, methodological, and empirical work in the analyses of discrete choices.
Professor McFadden has received numerous other awards including the John Bates Clark Medal given every two years to the American economist under the age of forty who has made the most outstanding contribution to the field of economic science.
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Selected Publications

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"The Costs of the ITC Downstream Exclusion Order to the U.S. Economy,"
by Daniel L. McFadden and Glenn A. Woroch, The Brattle Group, Inc., July 10, 2007.
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"Technical Appendix,"
by Daniel L. McFadden and Glenn A. Woroch, The Brattle Group, Inc., July 10, 2007.
- "Damages, chapter 7 in 'Econometrics: Legal, Practical, and Technical Issues,"
by Daniel L. McFadden, Kenneth T. Wise, Susan Guthrie and Paul Liu, ABA Section of Antitrust Law, 2006.
- "Structural Simulation of Facility Sharing: Unbundling Policies and Investment Strategy in Local Exchange Markets,"
by Daniel L. McFadden, Lisa Wood, William P. Zarakas, Glenn A. Woroch, Nauman Ilias, and Paul C. Liu, July 15, 2005.
- "The Misuse of Econometrics in Estimating Damages,"
by Daniel L. McFadden, Kenneth T. Wise, Susan J. Guthrie and Paul C. Liu, The Brattle Group, Inc. (first page downloadable).
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"Estimating Natural Resource Damages with and without Contingent Valuation,"
by Daniel L. McFadden, Kenneth T. Wise, and Susan J. Guthrie, The 88th Annual Meeting of the Air and Waste Management Association, June 1995.
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