Generated by GPT-5-mini| Alan Auerbach | |
|---|---|
| Name | Alan Auerbach |
| Occupation | Economist, Professor |
| Institutions | University of California, Berkeley; National Bureau of Economic Research; Hoover Institution |
Alan Auerbach is an American economist and public policy scholar noted for contributions to public finance, taxation, and fiscal policy analysis. He has held professorships and research positions at major institutions and has been influential in advising governments, mentoring scholars, and advancing empirical and theoretical methods in tax analysis.
Auerbach was educated in environments connected to prominent institutions such as Harvard University, Yale University, Princeton University, Stanford University, and the University of California, Berkeley during formative years that intersected with scholars from the National Bureau of Economic Research, the Brookings Institution, the Hoover Institution, and the American Enterprise Institute. His training involved interaction with faculty and contemporaries affiliated with NBER researchers, Kenneth Arrow, Paul Samuelson, Milton Friedman, James Tobin, Robert M. Solow, and the analytic traditions represented by John Maynard Keynes and Adam Smith through curricular and seminar connections. He completed graduate-level work under advisors and examiners linked to departments with ties to the Council of Economic Advisers, the Internal Revenue Service, and international organizations such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
Auerbach has held faculty and visiting posts at leading universities and research centers, including the University of California, Berkeley, the University of Pennsylvania, the London School of Economics, the University of Chicago, and the University of California, Los Angeles. He has been affiliated with policy and research organizations such as the National Bureau of Economic Research, the American Tax Policy Institute, the Tax Policy Center, and the Brookings Institution, and has participated in advisory roles to bodies like the United States Department of the Treasury, the Congressional Budget Office, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and the Joint Committee on Taxation. His departmental collaborations connected him with faculty groups influenced by scholars including Alan Blinder, Joseph Stiglitz, Martin Feldstein, David Card, and John B. Taylor.
Auerbach's research spans public finance topics, engaging analytic frameworks developed by economists such as James Mirrlees, Tony Atkinson, N. Gregory Mankiw, Emmanuel Saez, Thomas Piketty, and Richard Musgrave. He has contributed to shadow-price approaches commonly utilized in analyses influenced by Kenneth J. Arrow and Frank Ramsey, and to empirical tax incidence methods connected to work by Harberger and Peter Diamond. His studies address corporate taxation, capital income taxation, tax reform proposals, and international tax competition, intersecting with literature from George Akerlof, Olivier Blanchard, Paul Krugman, and Kenneth Rogoff. Auerbach developed and popularized computational techniques for policy simulation used alongside models from the National Income and Product Accounts, overlapping with methods from the Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium literature and tools employed at the International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank. He has analyzed the interplay between tax policy and public debt drawing on frameworks associated with Ricardian equivalence debates and scholarship by Barro and Feldstein, and his work on tax incidence draws on the empirical traditions of Hal Varian and Ariel Pakes.
Auerbach's publications include articles in leading journals and contributions to edited volumes published by presses connected to University of Chicago Press, Harvard University Press, MIT Press, and the National Bureau of Economic Research series. He has authored influential papers alongside coauthors with links to Columbia University, Princeton University, Harvard University, and the London School of Economics. Representative topics in his selected works cover corporate tax integration, tax reform case studies, behavioral responses to taxation, and tax policy in open economies—areas also explored by scholars from Yale University, Stanford University, University of Michigan, and New York University. His work appears in journals associated with editorial boards that include members from The American Economic Review, The Journal of Political Economy, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, and The Review of Economic Studies.
Auerbach has received recognition from academic and policy institutions such as the National Bureau of Economic Research, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Econometric Society, and professional societies including the American Economic Association. He has been awarded fellowships and honors that place him among recipients connected to the John Bates Clark Medal community, Guggenheim Fellowship holders, and prize lists featuring scholars from London School of Economics and Princeton University networks. His advisory roles have been acknowledged by governmental units including the United States Department of the Treasury and intergovernmental forums such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Auerbach's personal and family associations intersect with academic communities in regions such as Berkeley, California, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Princeton, New Jersey, London, and Washington, D.C., and with institutions including the University of California, Berkeley campus community and local research institutes. He has engaged in public lectures at venues like Harvard University, Yale University, Columbia University, and Stanford University and participated in panels at forums such as the World Economic Forum and conferences hosted by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Category:Economists Category:Public finance economists