Louis G. Putterman (born 1952)[1] is an American economist. He taught economics at Brown University from 1980 to 2025[2] and continues as a research professor there.[3]
Louis Putterman | |
|---|---|
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | Columbia University (B.A.) Yale University (Ph.D.) |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Development economics |
| Institutions | Brown University |
| Website | |
Biography
editPutterman received his B.A. in Economics (minor: Anthropology) from Columbia University in 1976, and his M.A. in International Relations in 1978 and Ph.D. in Economics in 1980 from Yale University. He joined the Brown University faculty after his doctoral studies and received a Sloan Research Fellowship in 1983.[4] He is a specialist on comparative economic systems and comparative economic development and has written extensively on China's economic development and the long-term development of human capabilities. Part of his work has focused on using laboratory experiments to analyze the preferences and dispositions underlying human social interactions, especially solving problems of collective action.[5] Putterman served as president of the Association for Comparative Economic Studies in 2000–2001.[1]
Research contributions
editBehavioral and experimental economics
editBeginning in the late 1990s, Putterman shifted his focus to behavioral economics and experimental economics through collaborations with Avner Ben-Ner of the University of Minnesota.[6] His experimental work has examined cooperation, trust (social science), and punishment in laboratory settings, particularly through variants of public goods game and trust game.[7] A significant focus of Putterman's experimental research, conducted with Brown colleague Talbot Page and others, has been investigating how institutional arrangements affect cooperative behavior. His work has explored how punishment mechanisms, communication, and democratic choice of rules influence outcomes in collective action problems.[8] This research examines whether subjects respond differently when rules are chosen democratically versus imposed exogenously. Putterman has also participated in international survey projects that study trust and social preferences, including the OECD's TrustLab project, which conducted representative surveys in multiple countries examining trust in government, inter-group biases, and responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.[9]
Long run comparative development
editPutterman published research on relationships between pre-modern development indicators and modern economic outcomes.[10] Papers co-authored with Burkett and Humblet (1999) and with Bockstette and Chanda (2002) presented statistical analysis of correlations between measures of pre-modern development and 20th century growth rates.[11][12] Putterman and Trainor created a dataset of estimated agricultural transition dates for 165 countries.[13] A 2008 paper used this data in regression analysis of year 2000 per capita income.[14] Borcan, Olsson and Putterman (2018) analyzed state history data and reported that quadratic models showed different patterns than linear models.[15] Putterman and David N. Weil (2010) constructed estimates of ancestral population origins using ethnic composition data and DNA studies.[16] The paper presented regression results comparing models using ancestral versus territorial development histories. Chanda, Cook, and Putterman (2014) used Putterman and Weil's and other data to show that developmental outcomes show persistence when outcomes are predicted by the ancestry's of countries' modern populations, rather than the reversal of fortune highlighted by Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson (economist) and James A. Robinson.[17][18] Jared Diamond (2012) discussed both papers in The New York Review of Books. The topic received media coverage following the 2024 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.[19] Oded Galor and Ömer Özak (2016) used the Putterman-Weil ancestry matrix in their research.[20]
Economics of organization
editPutterman was introduced to the economics of organization through his doctoral advisor Sidney G. Winter, known for his evolutionary economics approach to studying firms. Early in his career, Putterman edited The Economic Nature of the Firm: A Reader, collecting classic papers on institutional, agency-theoretic, and heterodox approaches to enterprise organization. The volume had three editions, with the second and third co-edited with Randall Kroszner.[21] Putterman published critiques of prevailing explanations for why capital hires labor rather than labor hiring capital in market economies. His 1984 paper "On Some Recent Explanations of Why Capital Hires Labor" challenged existing theories.[22] A subsequent contribution examined how the bundling of profit rights, decision rights, and tradable claims determines enterprise structure.[23]
Comparative economic systems
editPutterman's research examined work incentives and efficiency in worker-owned firms, cooperatives, and collective farms. With John Bonin and Derek Jones, he surveyed the literature on worked-managed firms through the mid-1980s.[24] With Gregory Dow, he co-authored a theoretical overview of the 'why capital hires labor, and not labor capital' question.[25] His early work extended research by Amartya Sen on agricultural cooperation among poor farmers, with applications to Tanzania and China.[26] He studied Tanzania's government-encouraged group farming initiatives[27] and China's collective farming system.[28] Putterman collaborated with Xiaoyuan Dong on studies of rural and urban industrial enterprise structure and performance in China's transition economy.[29][30]
Personal
editReferences
edit- 1 2 "Putterman, Louis". vivo.brown.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis. "Curriculum Vitae" (PDF).
- ↑ "Louis Putterman | Population Studies and Training Center | Brown University". www.brown.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
- ↑ "Sloan Research Fellows 1955-2007" (PDF). 2007. Retrieved January 14, 2023.
- ↑ "Louis Putterman". CEPR. 5 September 2019. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
- ↑ Ben-Ner, Avner; Putterman, Louis, eds. (1998). ''Economics, Values and Organization''. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521580984.
- ↑ Bochet, Olivier; Page, Talbot; Putterman, Louis (2006). "Communication and Punishment in Voluntary Contribution Experiments". Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. 60 (1): 11–26. doi:10.1016/j.jebo.2003.06.006
- ↑ Dal Bó, Pedro; Foster, Andrew; Putterman, Louis (2010). "Institutions and Behavior: Experimental Evidence on the Effects of Democracy". American Economic Review. 100 (5): 2205–2229. doi:10.1257/aer.100.5.2205
- ↑ Grimalda, Gianluca; Murtin, Fabrice; Pipke, David; Putterman, Louis; Sutter, Matthias (2023). "The Politicized Pandemic: Ideological Polarization and the Behavioral Response to COVID-19". European Economic Review. 156: 104472. doi:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2023.104472
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (2000). "Can an Evolutionary Approach to Development Predict Post-War Growth?" Journal of Development Studies 37(1): 1-30.
- ↑ Burkett, John P.; Humblet, Catherine; Putterman, Louis (1999). "Preindustrial and Postwar Economic Development: Is There a Link?" Economic Development and Cultural Change 47(3): 471-495. doi:10.1086/452416.
- ↑ Bockstette, Valerie; Chanda, Areendam; Putterman, Louis (2002). "States and Markets: The Advantage of an Early Start". Journal of Economic Growth 7(4): 347-369. doi:10.1023/A:1020827801137.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis; Trainor, Cary Anne (2006). "Agricultural Transition Year Country Data Set". Brown University.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (2006). "Agriculture, Diffusion and Development: Ripple Effects of the Neolithic Revolution". ''Economica''. '''75''' (300): 729–748.
- ↑ Borcan, Oana; Olsson, Ola; Putterman, Louis (2018). "State History and Economic Development: Evidence from Six Millennia". Journal of Economic Growth 23(1): 1-40.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis; Weil, David N. (2010). "Post-1500 Population Flows and the Long-Run Determinants of Economic Growth and Inequality". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 125 (4): 1627–1682. doi:10.1162/qjec.2010.125.4.1627
- ↑ Chanda, Areendam; Cook, C. Justin; Putterman, Louis (2014). "Persistence of Fortune: Accounting for Population Movements, There Was No Post-Columbian Reversal". American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 6(3): 1-28.
- ↑ Acemoglu, Daron; Johnson, Simon; Robinson, James A. (2002). "Reversal of Fortune: Geography and Institutions in the Making of the Modern World Income Distribution". The Quarterly Journal of Economics 117(4): 1231-1294.
- ↑ Smith, Noah (October 15, 2024). "A Nobel for the big big questions". Noahpinion.
- ↑ Galor, Oded; Ozak, Omer (2016). "The Agricultural Origins of Time Preference". American Economic Review 106(10): 3064-3103.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis; Kroszner, Randall S., eds. (1996). The Economic Nature of the Firm: A Reader (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521566087.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (1984). "On Some Recent Explanations of Why Capital Hires Labor". Economic Inquiry. 22 (2): 171–187.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (1993). "Ownership and the Nature of the Firm". Journal of Comparative Economics. 17 (2): 243–263. doi:10.1006/jcec.1993.1025
- ↑ Bonin, John P.; Jones, Derek C.; Putterman, Louis (1993). "Theoretical and Empirical Studies of Producer Cooperatives: Will Ever the Twain Meet?". Journal of Economic Literature. 31 (3): 1290–1320.
- ↑ Dow, Gregory K.; Putterman, Louis (2000). "Why Capital Suppliers (Usually) Hire Workers: What We Know and What We Need to Know". Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. 43 (3): 319–336. doi:10.1016/S0167-2681(00)00124-4
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (1980). "Voluntary Collectivization: A Model of Producers' Institutional Choice". Journal of Comparative Economics. 4 (2): 125–157. doi:10.1016/0147-5967(80)90025-6
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (1982). "Peasants, Collectives, and Choice: Economic Theory and Tanzania's Villages". ''Journal of Modern African Studies''. '''20''' (3): 423–442.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (1993). Continuity and Change in China's Rural Development: Collective and Reform Eras in Perspective. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195076714.
- ↑ Dong, Xiaoyuan; Putterman, Louis (1997). "Productivity and Organization in China's Rural Industries: A Stochastic Frontier Analysis". ''Journal of Comparative Economics''. '''24''' (2): 181–201.
- ↑ Dong, Xiaoyuan; Putterman, Louis (2003). "Soft Budget Constraints, Social Burdens, and Labor Redundancy in China's State Industry". Journal of Comparative Economics. 31 (1): 110–133. doi:10.1016/S0147-5967(02)00012-4
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (2012). The Good, The Bad, and the Economy. p. 297.
- ↑ Putterman, Louis (2012). The Good, The Bad, and the Economy. p. 297.