Biosketch
of William D. Nordhaus
William D. Nordhaus is Sterling Professor of Economics at
He
is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of the
From
1977 to 1979, he was a Member of the President's Council of Economic Advisers.
From 1986 to 1988, he served as the Provost of Yale University. He has served
on several committees of the National Academy of Sciences including the
Committee on Nuclear and Alternative Energy Systems, the Panel on Policy
Implications of Greenhouse Warming, the Committee on National Statistics, the
Committee on Data and Research on Illegal Drugs, and the Committee on the
Implications for Science and Society of Abrupt Climate Change. He recently chaired
a Panel of the National Academy of Sciences which produced a report, Nature's
Numbers, that recommended approaches to integrate environmental and other
non-market activity into the national economic accounts. More recently, he has
directed the Yale Project on Non-Market Accounting, supported by the Glaser
Foundation.
He is the author of many books,
among them Invention, Growth and Welfare, Is Growth Obsolete?, The
Efficient Use of Energy Resources, Reforming Federal Regulation, Managing
the Global Commons, Warming the World, and (joint with Paul
Samuelson) the classic textbook, Economics, whose nineteenth edition
will be published in 2009. His research has focused on economic growth and
natural resources, the economics of climate change, as well as the resource
constraints on economic growth. Since the 1970s, he has developed economic
approaches to global warming, including the construction of integrated economic
and scientific models (the DICE and RICE models) to determine the efficient
path for coping with climate change, with the latest vintage, DICE-2007,
published in A Question of Balance (Yale
University Press, 2008). Professor Nordhaus has also studied wage and price
behavior, health economics, augmented national accounting, the political
business cycle, productivity, and the “new economy.” His 1996 study of the
economic history of lighting back to Babylonian times found that the
measurement of long-term economic growth has been significantly underestimated.
He returned to Mesopotamian economics with a study, published in 2002 before
the war, of the costs of the U.S. war in Iraq, projecting a cost as high as $2
trillion. Recently, he has undertaken the “G-Econ project,” which provides the
first comprehensive measures of economic activity at a geophysical scale.