Steven Levitt

Steven Levitt

Steven Levitt is one of the nation's leading micro-economists and has done pioneering and influential work on natural experiments in economics. He studies a wide range of topics including the economic aspects of crime, corruption and education.

In 2004, Prof. Levitt was awarded the John Bates Clark Medal, awarded to the most influential economist under the age of 40. In 2006, he was named one of Time magazine's “100 People Who Shape Our World.” In 2003, journalist Stephen J. Dubner wrote an extensive profile of Levitt for the New York Times Magazine. Since then, Dubner and Levitt have collaborated on various projects including Freakonomics, a wildly popular presentation of Levitt's research for a general audience. It has since spun off into a sequel (SuperFreakonomics) as well as a feature film. In 2014, they published Think Like a Freak: How to Think Smarter about Almost Everything

Levitt Stories

Considering a Big Change? Go for It, Says Evidence From 20,000 Coin Flips

Prof. Steven Levitt study finds increased happiness in people who incorporate random chance into major decisions


To Stop Exam Cheats, Economists Say, Try Assigning Seats

Prof. Steven Levitt co-authors paper showing random seating assignment is the most effective anti-cheating measure


The Tyranny Of Appearing Certain

Prof. Steven Levitt notes that business school students feign knowledge rather than admit they don’t know the answer


Why It Pays To Think Like A Freak

Steven Levitt releases third book in "Freakonomics" series, aims to teach readers how to notice "the hidden side of everything."


CONTENT TYPE
Filter by content type