Skip to content
Category

Labor economists

page 1
Jean Tirole
French economist
Angus Deaton
British microeconomist (born 1945)
Daron Acemoğlu
Turkish-American economist and receiver of the 2024 Nobel Prize in economic sciences (born 1967)
Christophoros A. Pissarides
British-Cypriot economist
wage
A wage is the price of labor. Examples of wage payments include compensatory payments such as minimum wage, prevailing wage, and yearly bonuses, and remunerative payments such as prizes and tip payouts. Wages are part of the expenses that are involved in running a business. It is an obligation to the employee regardless of the profitability of the company.
David Card
Canadian economist and university teacher (born 1956)
Joshua Angrist
Israeli-American economist
Anthony Barnes Atkinson
British economist (1944–2017)
Olivier Blanchard
French economist and professor
Alberto Alesina
economist (1957–2020)
Emmanuel Saez
French-American economist (born 1972)
Renato Brunetta
Italian economist and politician (born 1950)
Ernst Fehr
Austrian economist
İmren Aykut
Turkish statesperson (born 1940)
Richard Layard, Baron Layard
British economist (born 1934)
Marianne Bertrand
Belgian economist
Elhanan Helpman
Israeli-American economist
Janet Currie
Canadian economist
Richard Blundell
British economist
Klaus F. Zimmermann
German economist
Tito Boeri
Italian economist
Andrew Oswald
British economist
Rania Antonopoulos
Greek economist and politician
Nicola Acocella
Italian economist (born 1939)
Gerard Veldkamp
Dutch politician (1921-1990)
Jülide Sarıeroğlu
Turkish statesperson (born 1979)
Nicoli Nattrass
South African academic
Pierre Cahuc
French economist
John Van Reenen
English economist
Bertil Holmlund
Swedish economist
David Blanchflower
British economist