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1969 2011
Prize category:
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The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1985
Franco Modigliani
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1985
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Franco Modigliani
Autobiography
I was born in Rome, Italy, the
son of Enrico Modigliani and Olga Flaschel. My father was a
leading pediatrician in the city and my mother was a volunteer
social worker.
My school performance in the early years was good though not
outstanding. Then, in 1932, a major trauma occurred. My father
died as a consequence of an operation. I suddenly realized how
deeply I loved and admired him and at 13 my whole world seemed to
collapse. After this event my school performance for the next 3
years became spotty until I moved to Liceo Visconti, the best
high school in Rome, and the challenge proved healthy and I
seemed to blossom. Encouraged, I decided to skip the last year of
the Liceo, passed the required difficult exams and entered the
University of Rome at 17 (two years ahead of the norm).
My family hoped that I would follow in my father's steps,
entering a career in medicine. I was torn for a while, but
finally decided against it because of my low tolerance level for
sufferings and blood. Instead I chose law which in Italy, opens
the way to many career possibilities. In my second year I decided
to enter a national competition sponsored by the student
organization (I Littoriali della Coltura) in the area of
economics. To my surprise I won first prize and, although now I
would hesitate to recommend that first essay as a significant
contribution to economics, clearly, it served the purpose of
establishing my current interest in economics. Unfortunately,
under fascism, teaching in this field was dismal, and only with
the advice of the few good economists I knew personally, and
especially of Riccardo Bachi, I began on my own to read the
English and Italian classics.
The Littoriali had put me in contact with young antifascists, and
my political opposition to the regime began then. My involvement
with my future wife, Serena Calabi, and her remarkable father,
Giulio, who was a long standing antifascist also contributed. In
1938 the Italian racial laws were promulgated and at the
invitation of my future in laws, I joined them in Paris where, in
May 1939, Serena and I were married. I enrolled at the Sorbonne but found the teaching there uninspiring
and a waste of time, so I spent my time studying on my own and
writing my thesis at the Bibliotheque St. Genevieve. In June 1939
I returned briefly to Rome to discuss my thesis and receive my
degree of Doctor Juris from the University of Rome. Shortly after
this, fearing that Europe was going to be soon engulfed in a
bloody war, we applied for an immigration visa for the U.S. and
arrived in New York in August 1939, a few days before the
beginning of World War II.
It became apparent that our stay in the U.S. would be a long one
and I immediately began thinking on how best to pursue my
interest in economics. I had the great luck of being awarded a
free tuition fellowship by the Graduate Faculty of Political and
Social Science of the New School for Social Research, an
institution freshly created to give haven to the European
scholars who were victims of the three fascist dictatorships.
Thus in fall 1939, I started on a routine that was to last three
years, of studying at night from 6 - 10, while working during the
day selling European books to support my family which soon
included our first son: Andre. I worked hard but, nonetheless,
remember that period as an exciting one, as I was discovering my
passion for economics, thanks also to excellent teachers,
including Adolph Lowe and above all Jacob Marschak to whom I owe
a debt of gratitude beyond words. He helped me develop solid
foundations in economics and econometrics, some mathematical
foundations, introduced me to the great issues of the day and
gave me, together with his unforgettable kindness, constant
encouragement. In particular I owe to him that blend of theory
and empirical analysis, theories that can be tested and empirical
work guided by theory - that has characterized a good deal of my
later work. Marschak also provided me with an experience that
contributed to my development, by inviting me to participate in
an informal seminar which met in New York around 1940-41, whose
members included, among others, Abraham Wald, Tjalling Koopmans and Oscar Lange.
I consider that my formal training ended in 1941 when Marschak
left the New School to join the University of Chicago, and I
obtained my first teaching job as an instructor at New Jersey
College for Women. My first published article in English,
"Liquidity Preference and the Theory of Interest and Money",
Econometrica, Vol. 12, No. 1, January 1944, which is also,
substantially, my doctoral dissertation, and which I regard as
one of my major contributions, appeared some two years later. The
result of discussions in Marschak's seminar and of a running
debate with Abba Lerner, it purports to integrate the Keynesian
"revolution", then generally regarded as a total break with the
past, with the mainstream of classical economics.
In 1942 I became an instructor in economics and statistics at
Bard College, then a residential college of Columbia University, and came to
appreciate the unique qualities of life in an American college
campus, especially the intimate association with first rate
students. In 1944 I returned to the New School as a Lecturer and
a Research Associate at the Institute of World Affairs where
together with Hans Neisser, I was responsible for a project whose
results were eventually published in National Income and
International Trade. During this period I also made my first
contribution to the study of saving, which has since come to be
known as the Duesenberry-Modigliani hypothesis.
In fall 1948 I left New York, having been awarded the prestigious
Political Economy Fellowship of the University of Chicago as well
as offered the opportunity of joining, as a Research Consultant,
the Cowles Commission for Research in Economics, then the leading
institution in its field. Shortly after my arrival I accepted an
attractive position at the University of Illinois as director of a
research project on "Expectations and Business Fluctuations".
However, I remained in Chicago through the academic year 1949-50,
greatly benefiting from my association with the Cowles
Commission, staffed and visited by people like Marschak,
Koopmans, Arrow, Simon, at a time when the profession was
absorbing two important revolutions, one centering on the theory
of choice under uncertainty, initiated by von Neuman and
Morgenstern, and the other on statistical inference from
non-experimental observations, inspired by Haavelmo.
My association with the University of Illinois lasted only till
1952 because of internal strife. During that brief time, I
befriended a brilliant young graduate student, Richard Brumberg.
With his collaboration we laid the foundations for what was to
become the "Life Cycle Hypothesis of Saving". It was elaborated
in 1953 and 1954 in two papers, one dealing with individual
behaviour and the other with aggregate saving. After we had both
left the University of Illinois, Brumberg had gone to complete
his Ph.D. at the John Hopkins
University and I joined Carnegie Institute of Technology, now
Carnegie-Mellon University. The
"aggregate" paper was only published in 1980 in my Collected
Papers because the shock of Brumberg's untimely death in 1955
sapped my will to undertake the revisions and condensation that
would have been required for publication in one of the standard
professional journals.
My association with Carnegie, which lasted until 1960, was a very
productive one. In addition to completing the two basic papers
setting the foundations for the "Life Cycle Hypothesis", I
collaborated on a book dealing with the problem of optimal
production smoothing, and wrote the two essays with Miller on the
effect of financial structure and dividend policy on the market
value of a firm. I also published a paper with E. Grunberg on the
predictability of social events when the agent reacts to
prediction, which later was to provide one of the pillars for the
"theory of rational expectations". All of these contributions
represented, to some extent, the coming to fruition of seeds
started during my research on "Expectations and Business
Fluctuations".
In 1960 I was a visiting professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
to which I returned after a year at Northwestern University, and where I
have remained ever since. Supported by this unique institution
and its unique colleagues, I have pursued the interests developed
earlier in macroeconomics, including criticism of the monetarist
positions, generalizations of the monetary mechanism and
empirical tests of the" Life Cycle Hypothesis". I have also
branched out into new areas and, in particular, international
finance and the international payment system, the effects of and
cures for inflation, stabilization policies in extensively
indexed open economies, and into various fields of finance such
as credit rationing, the term structure of interest rates and the
valuation of speculative assets.
In the late sixties I also had a major responsibility for
designing a large scale model of the U.S. economy, the MPS,
sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank and still utilized by it.
Finally, I have participated actively in the debate over economic
policies both in Italy and the U.S., concentrating lately on the
deleterious effects of the huge public deficits.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1985, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1986
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Franco Modigliani died on September 25, 2003.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1985
MLA style: "Franco Modigliani - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 21 May 2012 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/1985/modigliani-autobio.html
