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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ta-Chung_LiuTa-Chung Liu - Wikipedia

    Ta-Chung Liu (Chinese: 劉大中; October 27, 1914 – August 14, 1975) was a Chinese American economist and econometrician. He was a professor of economics at Johns Hopkins University and Cornell University.

  2. Aug 17, 1975 · Ta‐chung Liu, a professor of economics at Cornell University since 1958, died Thursday at Tompkins County Hospital in Ithaca, N.Y. He was 60 years old and lived in Ithaca. He took a leave in...

  3. Abstract. Born at Beijing, China, in 1914, died at Ithaca, New York, in 1975. Ta-Chung Liu studied civil engineering in the National Chiao Tung University (BS, 1936) and Cornell University (MCE, 1937) and later economics in Cornell (PhD, 1940). Liu served as Counselor of the Chinese Embassy (1941–6), Professor of Economics in the National ...

    • Marc Nerlove
  4. Ta-Chung's career, cut short by his untimely death, was a remarkable one which blended an interest in basic data and sophisticated econometric theory with the practical concerns of. TA-CHUNG LIU, 1914-1975 529. national income accounting and econometric tion and implementation. He was, and is, an inspiration to all of us who knew him and his.

  5. Dec 11, 2013 · Dynamic models of things like risk must hold up to data that have yet to be collected if they are expected to reliably predict shifts in the economy over the long term. Engle, a 2003 Nobel laureate in Economics, learned that lesson many years ago from celebrated econometrician Ta-Chung Liu, his former thesis advisor.

  6. Ta-Chung Liu. October 27, 1914 — August 14, 1975. Ta-Chung Liu, the Goldwin Smith Professor of Economics from 1964 to 1975, was born in Peking. After graduating . in civil engineering at the National University of Communication in 1936, he came to Cornell to study railway engineering, earning the M.S. in 1937.

  7. Mar 21, 2024 · Ta-Chung Liu (Chinese: 劉大中; October 27, 1914 – August 14, 1975) was a Chinese American economist and econometrician. He was a professor of economics at Johns Hopkins University and Cornell University.

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