Herbert Scarf

Herbert Scarf
Herbert Scarf
Born Herbert Eli Scarf
(1930-07-25)July 25, 1930
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died November 15, 2015(2015-11-15) (aged 85)
Sag Harbor, New York
Nationality American
Institution Yale University
Field Economics, Mathematics
Alma mater Princeton University
Temple University
Doctoral
advisor
Salomon Bochner
Doctoral
students
Frank Proschan
Donald Iglehart
Menahem E. Yaari
Duncan K. Foley
Rolf Mantel
John Shoven
Timothy Kehoe
Ludo Van der Heyden
Awards John von Neumann Theory Prize (1983)
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Herbert Eli "Herb" Scarf (July 25, 1930 – November 15, 2015) was an American mathematical economist and Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale University.

Life and career

Scarf was born in Philadelphia, the son of Jewish emigrants from Ukraine and Russia, Lene (Elkman) and Louis Scarf.[1] He was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. During his undergraduate work he finished in the top 10 of the 1950 William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition, the major mathematics competition between universities across the United States and Canada. He received his PhD from Princeton in 1954.

Among his notable works is a seminal paper in cooperative game in which he showed sufficiency for a core (economics) in general balanced games. Sufficiency and necessity had been previously shown by Lloyd Shapley for games where players were allowed to transfer utility between themselves freely. Necessity is shown to be lost in the generalization.

Scarf received the 1973 Frederick W. Lanchester Award for his contribution The Computation of Economic Equilibria with the collaboration of Terje Hansen, which pioneered the use of numeric algorithms to solve general equilibrium systems using Applied general equilibrium models.

References



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.