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  1. Jonathan A. Parker. Robert C. Merton (1970) Professor of Finance. Verified email at MIT.edu - Homepage. Macroeconomics Household finance Asset Pricing Public Finance Behavioral Economics. ... Y Ait‐Sahalia, JA Parker, M Yogo. The Journal of Finance 59 (6), 2959-3004, 2004. 490: 2004:

  2. Mar 30, 2020 · Jonathan Parker PhD ’96, the Robert C. Merton (1970) Professor of Finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management, is a leading expert in understanding how U.S. citizens use stimulus payments from the government, and how big an impact such efforts make on the national economy.

  3. About. Jonathan A. Parker is the Robert C. Merton (1970) Professor of Finance at MIT's Sloan School of Management and codirector of the MIT Center for Finance and Policy. An expert in finance...

    • MIT Sloan School of Management
  4. Jonathan A. Parker is the Robert C. Merton (1970) Professor of Finance, Head of the MIT Sloan Finance Department, and co-director of the MIT Golub Center for Finance and Policy. He has held numerous service positions and consulting positions, including Area Head of Economics, Finance and Accounting at Sloan, Editor of the NBER Macroeconomics ...

  5. Jonathan A. Parker. By Aaron Steelman. Econ Focus. Third/Fourth Quarter 2016. Interview. Download article. Photo by Andrew Kubica, Valencia Images/MIT Sloan School of Management. Economists are sometimes pegged as either theorists or empiricists. But often this dichotomy is overstated.

  6. Nov 29, 2021 · Biography. Jonathan A. Parker is the Robert C. Merton (1970) Professor of Financial Economics, Head of the MIT Sloan Finance Department, and co-director of the MIT Golub Center for Finance and Policy. He has held numerous service positions and consulting positions, including Area Head of Economics, Finance and Accounting at Sloan, Editor of the ...

  7. Mar 19, 2015 · “There are only so many countries and so many recessions,” says Jonathan Parker, the International Programs Professor of International Management at MIT and a macroeconomist by training. “The main way we get more data is through the passage of time. Sometimes time flies. But it produces more data only slowly.”

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