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Franklin Fisher

Franklin M. Fisher
Born (1934-12-13) December 13, 1934 (age 82)
New York City
Institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1960–present)
National Bureau of Economic Research (1989–present)
Field Industrial organization
Microeconomics
Alma mater Harvard (Ph.D., 1960; A.B., 1956)
Doctoral
advisor
John R. Meyer
Doctoral
students
Stanley Fischer
Michael Rothschild
Richard L. Schmalensee
Charles F. Manski
Mark J. Machina
Douglas Bernheim
Michael Whinston
Andrei Shleifer
Contributions Work in antitrust economics, industrial organization, microeconomics, and econometrics
Awards John Bates Clark Medal (1973)

Franklin Marvin Fisher (born December 13, 1934) is an American economist. He has been teaching economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 1960.

Fisher attended Harvard University, where he was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa in 1955 and received a Bachelor of Arts degree (summa cum laude) in 1956, followed a Master's degree in 1957 and a PhD in Economics from Harvard in 1960. His doctoral thesis was entitled A Priori Information and Time Series Analysis.

Fisher married Ellen Paradise Fisher in 1958. They have three children, and eight grandchildren.

He was Teaching Fellow at Harvard from 1956–57, Junior Fellow of the Society of Fellows at Harvard from 1957–59, Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago from 1959–60, Assistant Professor of Economics at MIT from 1960–62, Associate Professor of Economics at MIT from 1962–65, and Professor of Economics at MIT from 1965–2004. Currently he is the Jane Berkowitz Carlton and Dennis William Carlton Professor of Microeconomics, Emeritus at MIT. He has been a director of the National Bureau of Economic Research since 1989.

Fisher's fields of specialization within economics are industrial organization, microeconomics, and econometrics. He has written extensively in the area of antitrust economics. He has served as an expert witness in matters involving antitrust, contract disputes, valuation, damages, and trademark infringement for many years. He was the chief economic witness for IBM in its antitrust confrontation with the United States Department of Justice, a case the Government dropped in 1982 after 13 years. He served in a similar role on behalf of the United States Department of Justice in the case of United States v. Microsoft.


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