Kenneth J. Arrow, 1921-
One of the most prominent economic theorists of the twentieth century, Kenneth J. Arrow
has made fundamental contributions to numerous fields, most of then concentrated around Neo-Walrasian general
equlibrium theory and welfare economics, of which he can be considered one of the
primary architects.
Kenneth Arrow was a thorough New York City product: born and raised in the city,
educated at City College (CCNY) and subsequently a graduate student in mathematical
statistics at Columbia under Harold Hotelling and Abraham Wald. It was at Columbia that he was nudged towards economics.
Finishing his Ph.D coursework in 1942, Arrow's subsequent dissertation was to become a
decade-long affair. After a stint during World War II in the Weather Division of the USAF
(which resulted in his 1949 article), Arrow returned to Columbia in 1946 and, with
dissertation topic still missing, he began taking steps to move into the private sector -
passing a series of actuarial examinations and searching for jobs in the insurance
industry. During this time period, Arrow attended Jacob Marschak's
mathematical seminar at the New School.
Hotelling and Wald, exasperated at Arrow's drifting, convinced him to join Marschak at the
Cowles Commission in Chicago as a research associate
in 1947.
At the Cowles Commission, Arrow absorbed much of
the of the Walrasian research programme being set up under Marschak
and Koopmans. Arrow wrote an article with Marschak and
Harris on inventory policy and contributed a piece to the famous 1951 Koopmans-edited
Cowles monograph on activity analysis.
After two highly inspiring years at Cowles, Arrow moved to the RAND Corporation, a
research institute associated with the United States Air Force. He would subsequently move
on to teach at Stanford - where he has remained until today, save for an interlude at Harvard from 1968 to 1979.
One of the research items at RAND was the then-novel use of game theory to analyze international conflicts and
strategy. However, game theory itself presupposed the the parties possessed some sort of
utility functions. For parlor games with individual people, this is acceptable, but when
dealing with nations as a whole involved in strategic affairs, the question of
"America's" utility and "Soviet Union's" utility was an altogether
different issue. Thus, Arrow wondered, under what conditions might it be reasonable to
assume that collectivities such as nations possessed nicely-behaved utility functions. At
long last, a dissertation topic was found, written and subsequently published as the
momentous classic, Social Choice and Individual Values (1951).
At the heart of Arrow's 1951 dissertation was the presumption that social choice
orderings could be derived from individual choice orderings in a simple axiomatic manner.
Arrow's astounding conclusion, since then referred to as the "Arrow Impossibility
Theorem", was that a certain set of quite acceptable axioms on social choice
orderings necessarily implied that there would be a "dictator" (i.e. that a
single agent's own preferences over outcomes would dominate everybody else's). This
celebrated result has since created quite an research industry in social welfare theory to
which Arrow himself has contributed numerous follow-ups (e.g. 1952, 1967, 1973, 1977)
which has sometimes led him far afield into the philosophy of ethics and justice (e.g.
1967, 1973, 1977, 1978).
Arrow's dissertation was concurrently published with another formidable piece of
Cowles-inspired work: his proof of the First and
Second Welfare theorems in general equilibrium theory (1951). Gerard Debreu, then at Cowles, had independently proved the same theorem.
Arrow and Debreu began their famous collaboration which culminated in the celebrated "Arrow-Debreu" proof of existence of a
competitive equilibrium (1954).
All the while, Arrow had been groping for incorporating uncertainty into a general equilibrium context.
In a path-breaking article, Arrow (1953) suggested that a simple procedure would be to
consider markets for "state-contingent"
commodities. Consequently, he demonstrated that in equilibrium with a full set
of state-contingent markets, there would be an optimal
allocation of risk However, Arrow, however, noted that a full set of
state-contingent commodities might seem too unrealistic. In the same article, Arrow
proposed the famous contrivance of "Arrow
securities", i.e. securities which paid a unit of account in a particular state
and nothing otherwise. Arrow demonstrated that a full set of state-contingent commodity
markets could be replaced by a considerably smaller set of Arrow securities which spanned
the various possible states - and that, consequently, the optimal allocation of risk would
be identical as in an Arrow-Debreu
model with a full set of state-contingent markets.
Arrow subsequently turned his attention to a new topic - the issue of "stability" of competitive equilibrium with
multiple markets. His interest in this topic was initiated by his work on "D-
stability" with McManus (1958) which was followed up by a famous article with Hurwicz (1958) on local stability. Perhaps his most famous
achievement in this regard was to provide sufficient conditions (i.e. WARP) for global stability of equilibrium in an article with
Block and Hurwicz (1959). His subsequent extensions and
clarifications with Hurwicz (1960, 1961) outlined both the achievements and problems of
stability theory.
Arrow had, in the meantime, maintained his interest in mathematical programming. With Hurwicz and Uzawa (1961), he produced a
famous rather weak constraint qualification (which replaced Kuhn-Tucker's) for obtaining
the saddle-point characterization of a local solution to a non-linear programming problem.
With Enthoven (1961) he produced several famous results in characterizing optimization
problems when both the maximand and constraint functions are quasi-concave.
He moved concurrently into the issues of production and growth. In 1961, with Hollis Chenery, B.S. Minhas and Robert Solow,
Arrow introduced the famous "Constant
Elasticity of Substitution" (CES) production function. In 1962, he produced two
famous pieces on "learning-by-doing", the predecessor of modern endogenous growth theory.
His landmark contributions continued: putting his early experience with actuarial work
to good use, Arrow produced his famous 1963 paper on the medical insurance that introduced
the concept of moral hazard into economics and announced the dawn of information theory.
His 1965 lectures Aspects of the Theory of Risk Bearing introduced the famous "Arrow-Pratt" measure of risk-aversion
as well as popularized asymmetric information and the terms "moral hazard" and
"adverse selection". Much of Arrow's work on moral hazard, optimal insurance and
optimal risk-bearing allocations was collected in his famous 1971 book, Essays in the
Theory of Risk- Bearing. Arrow's work on education and racial discrimination (1972,
1973) have since become famous classroom applications of signalling and screening
mechanisms under conditions of asymmetric information.
Arrow had linked the theory of public
investment with uncertainty in a famous article with Lind (1970) arguing for the
risk-bearing role of government. His concern with mathematical programming and public
policy led him naturally to the topic of optimal policy - in particular, to the use of
optimal control theory as a guide to resource allocation, inventory policy, public
investment, etc. In a series of articles with Mordecai Kurz (1969,
1970), culminating in their famous 1970 book, Arrow presented numerous applications and
extensions of the then-rare use of Hamiltonians. Arrow's famous "sufficiency"
conditions for an optimum generalized the Mangasarian conditions.
In 1971, Kenneth Arrow and Frank H. Hahn produced their famous
treatise/textbook General Competitive Analysis (1971) which remained, until
recently, a definitive treatment of Walrasian general
equilibrium theory. Although research in general equilibrium have since moved in very
different directions than those considered by Arrow and Hahn, it was at least partly due
to their critical assessments of the treatment of money, uncertainty and stability in a
G.E. context which led economists to recast these issues in different light. In 1981-3,
Arrow lent his hand as co-editor of the Handbook of Mathematical Economics, which
once again summarized the state of the art in G.E.
Although Arrow has produced more than a lion's share of groundbreaking contributions to
general equilibrium theory, social welfare theory, growth, production, uncertainty,
information and optimal public policy, he has not rested on his laurels and continues to
produce apace. For instance, his 1979 work with Radner on the
theory of "teams" and with Chang on the theory of natural resources (1980) has
opened new avenues in the theory of organization and resource allocation. Even more
recently, Arrow has teamed up with Hahn again to began tackling the
issue of "endogenous uncertainty" (1999).
Kenneth Arrow is perhaps one of the most respected and admired living economists. In
many ways, his life is exemplary in that the almost incredible success that have
accompanied him have not, in any way, hardened into that arrogance and pettiness so common
among professional scholars. By all accounts, Arrow ranks highly among economists and
non-economists, orthodox and heterodox, for his scholarly depth, his wide-ranging
interests, his personal and intellectual generosity and openness, and his consistent
refusal to engage in ideological quibbling. If nothing else, Arrow is positive proof of
Pushkin's conjecture that "villainy and genius are two things that can never go
together" (Pushkin, 1832).
However, we must also remind ourselves that his achievements were neither the result of
wild luck nor were they quickly or cheaply bought by hack work, but rather the outcome of
an often painful but nonetheless continuous dedication to the task of the scholar. It is
evident throughout his work that Arrow has maintained the highest standards of rigor,
avoiding oversimplification and ideological rhetoric, clearly aware of and indeed actively
demarcating the limits of applicability of economic theory. In so doing, has achieved and
granted to us a far deeper understanding of both economics and the economic process than
might otherwise have been possible.
Kenneth J. Arrow shared the Nobel
prize in 1972 with another exemplary scholar, John Hicks, for
his "pioneering contributions to general economic equilibrium theory and welfare
theory". It might be informative to recall that it was Hicks's own Value and
Capital (1939) that Arrow counts as the most influential work in his early
intellectual career.
Major Works of Kenneth J. Arrow
- "On the Use of Winds in Flight Planning", 1949, Journal of Meteorology
- "Bayes and Minimax Solutions of Sequential Decision Problems", with D.
Blackwell and M.A. Girshick, 1949, Econometrica
- "A Difficulty in the Concept of Social Welfare", 1950, JPE
- Social Choice and Individual Values, 1951.
- "An Extension of the Basic Theorems of Classical Welfare Economics", 1951, in
Neyman, editor, Proceedings of Second Berkeley Symposium
- "Optimal Inventory Policy", with T. Harris and J. Marschak,
1951, Econometrica
- "Little's Critique of Welfare Economics", 1951, AER
- "Mathematical Models in the Social Sciences", 1951, in Lerner and Lasswell,
editors, Policy Sciences
- "Alternative Proof of the Substitution Theorem for Leontief Models in the General
Case", 1951, in Koopmans, editor, Activity Analysis of Production and Allocation
- "Alternative Approaches to the Theory of Choice in Risk-Taking Situation",
1951, Econometrica
- "The Determination of Many-Commodity Preference Scales by Two- Commodity
Comparisons", 1952, Metroeconomica
- "Principle of Rationality in Collective Decisions", 1952, Economie
Appliquee
- "Admissable Points of Convex Sets", with E.W. Barankwin and D.W. Blackwell,
1953, Contributions to the Theory of Games
- "The Role of Securities in the Optimal Allocation of Risk-Bearing", 1953, Econometrie
- (in 1963, RES).
- "Existence of an Equilibrium for a Competitive Economy", with Gerard Debreu, 1954, Econometrica.
- "Import Substitution in Leontief Models", 1954, Econometrica
- "A Theorem on Expectations and the Stability of Equilibrium", 1956, with A.
Enthoven, Econometrica.
- "Reduction of Constrained Maxima to Saddle-Point
Problems" with L. Hurwicz, 1956, Proceedings of the Third Berkeley
Symposium
- "Statistics and Economic Policy", 1957, Econometrica
- "Decision Theory and Operations Research", 1957, Operations Research
- "Gradient Methods for Constrained Maxima", with L. Hurwicz,
1957, Operations Research
- "Utilities, Attitudes, Choices: A review note", 1958, Operations Research
- "A Note on
Expectations and Stability" with M. Nerlove, 1958, Econometrica
- "A Note on the Dynamic Stability", with M. McManus, 1958, Econometrica.
- "Tinbergen on Economic Policy", 1958, JASA
- Studies in the Mathematical Theory of Inventory and Production, with S. Karlin
and H.E. Scarf, 1958.
- Studies in Linear and Non-Linear Programming with L. Hurwicz
and Hirofumi Uzawa, 1958.
- "On the Stability of Competitive Equilibrium I", with Leonid Hurwicz, 1958, Econometrica.
- "On the Stability of Competitive Equilibrium, II", with J.D.Block, L.Hurwicz, 1959, Econometrica.
- "Rational Choice Functions and Ordering", 1959, Economica.
- "Toward a Theory of Price Adjustment", 1959, in Abramovitz, editor, Allocation
of Economic Resources.
- "Rational Choice Functions and Orderings", 1959, Economica
- "Competitive Stability under Weak Gross Substitutability: the Euclidian distance
approach" with L. Hurwicz, 1960, IER.
- "The Work of Ragnar Frisch, Econometrician", 1960, Econometrica
- "Some Remarks on the Equilibria of Economic Systems" with L. Hurwicz, 1960, Econometrica.
- "Constraint Qualifications in Non-Linear Programming", with L. Hurwicz and H. Uzawa, 1961, Naval
Research Logistics Quarterly
- "Quasi-Concave Programming", with A.C. Enthoven, 1961, Econometrica
- "Capital-Labor Substitution and Economic Efficiency", with H.B. Chenery, B.S.
Minhas and R.M. Solow, 1961, REStat
- "Additive Logarithmic Demand Functions and the Slutsky Relations", 1961, RES
- "Competitive Stability under Weak Gross Substitutability: Nonlinear price
adjustment and adaptive expectations", 1962, IER.
- "The Economic Implications of Learning by Doing", 1962, AER.
- "Economic Welfare and the Allocation of Resources for Innovation", 1962, in
Nelson, editor, The Rate and Direction of Inventive Activity.
- "Uncertainty and the Welfare Economics of Medical Care", 1963, AER.
- "Utility and Expectation in Economic Behavior", 1963, in Koch, editor, Psychology
- "Optimal Capacity Policy, the Cost of Capital and Myopic Decision Rules",
1964, Annals of Institute of Statistical Mechanics
- Aspects of the Theory of Risk-Bearing, 1965.
- "Discounting and Public Investment Criteria", 1966, Water Research
- "Values and Collective Decision Making", 1967, in Laslett and Runcimann,
editors, Philosophy, Politics and Society
- "The Place of Moral Obligation in Preference Systems", 1967, in Hook, editor, Human
Values and Economic Policy.
- "Optimal Capital Policy with Irreversible Investment", 1968, in Wolfe, editor,
Value, Capital and Growth
- "Applications of Control Theory to Economic Growth", 1968, Mathematics of
Decision Sciences
- "Economic Equilibrium", 1968, IESS.
- "The Organization of Economic Activity: Issue pertinent to the choice of market
versus nonmarket allocations", 1969, Analysis and Evalution of Public Expenditures
- "Optimal Public Investment Policy and Controllability with Fixed Private Savings
Ration", with M. Kurz 1969, JET
- "Optimal Growth with Irreversible Investment in a Ramsey Model", with M. Kurz 1970, Econometrica
- "Uncertainty and the Evaluation of Public Investment Decisions", with R.C.
Lind, 1970, AER.
- Public Investment, the Rate of Return and Optimal Fiscal Policy, 1970, with M. Kurz.
- "A Utilitarian Approach to the Concept of Equality in Public Expenditures",
1971, QJE
- "The Value and Demand for Information", 1971, in McGuire and Radner, editors, Decision
and Organization
- "Expositions of the Theory of Choice under Uncertainty", 1971, in McGuire and
Radner, editors, Decision and Organization
- Essays in the Theory of Risk-Bearing, 1971.
- General Competitive Analysis, with F.H.Hahn, 1971.
- "The Firm in General Equilibrium Theory", 1971, in Marris and Wood, editors, The
Corporate Economy.
- "Problems in Resource Allocation in United States Medical Care", 1972, in Kunz
and Fehr, editors, Challenge of LIfe
- "Models of Job Discrimination", 1972, in Pascal, editor, Ractial
Discrimination in Economic Life
- "Some Models of Race in the Labor Market", 1972, in Pascal, editor, Ractial
Discrimination in Economic Life
- "Cost-Theoretical and Demand-Theoretical Approaches to the Theory of Price
Determination", with D. Starrett, 1973, in Hicks and Weber, editors, Carl Menger and
the Austrian School of Economics.
- "Some Ordinalist-Utilitarian Notes on Rawls's Theory of Justice", 1973, J
of Philosophy
- "Higher Education as a Filter", 1973, JPublicE
- "The Theory of Discrimination", 1973, in Aschenfelter and Rees, editors, Discrimination
in Labor Markets
- "Formal Theories of Social Welfare", 1973, in Wiener, editor, Dictionary of
the History of Ideas
- "Social Responsibility and Economic Efficiency", 1973, Public Policy
- "Rawls's Principle of Just Saving", 1973, Swedish JE
- "General Economic Equilibrium: Purpose, analytic techniques, collective
choice", 1974, AER.
- The Limits of Organization, 1974.
- "Limited Knowledge and Economic Analysis", 1974, AER
- "Optimal Insurance and Generalized Deductibles", 1974, Scandavian Actuarial
Journal
- "Thorstein Veblen as an Economic Theorist", 1975, American Economist
- "Vertical Integration and Communication", 1975, Bell JE
- "The Genesis of Dynamic Systems Governed by Metzler Matrices", 1976, Mathematical
Economics and Game Theory.
- "Quantity Adjustment in Resource Allocation: A statistical interpretation",
1976, in Grierson, editor, Public and Urban Economics
- The Viability and Equity of Capitalism, 1976.
- Theoretical Issues in Health Insurance, 1976.
- Studies in Resource Allocation Processes, with L. Hurwicz,
1977.
- "Extended Sympathy and the Possibility of Social Choice", 1977, AER
- "Current Developments in the Theory of Social Choice", 1977, Social
Research
- "Nozick's Entitlement Theory of Justice", 1978, Philosophia
- "Risk Allocation and Information: Some recent theoretical developments", 1978,
Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance.
- "The Future and Present in Economic Life", 1978, Economic Inquiry
- "Jacob Marschak's Contributions to the Economics of Decision and Information",
1978, AER
- "The Property Rights Doctrine and Demand Revelation under Incomplete
Information", 1979, in Boskin, editor, Economics and Human Welfare
- "Allocation of Resources in Large Teams", with R. Radner,
1979, Econometrica
- "The Trade-Off Between Growth and Equity", 1979, in Greenfield et al.,
editors, Theory for Economic Efficiency.
- "Real and Nominal Magnitudes in Economics", 1980, J of Financial and
Quantitative Analysis
- "Optimal Pricing, Use and Exploration of Uncertain Natural Resource Stocks",
with S.L. Chang, 1980, in Liu, editor, Dynamic Optimization and Mathematical Economics.
- "Futures Markets: Some theoretical perspectives", 1981, J of Futures
Markets
- "Pareto Efficiency with Costly Transfers", 1981, in Los, editor, Studies in
Economic Theory and Practice
- "Optimal and Voluntary Income Distribution", 1981, in Rosefielde, editor, Economic
Welfare and Economics of Soviet Socialism
- Editor, Handbook of Mathematical Economics, Volumes I- III,
1981-1986, with M.D.
Intriligator - intro
& contents
- "Risk Perception in Psychology and Economics", 1982, Economic Inquiry
- "Why People Go Hungry:
Review of Sen", 1982
- Collected Papers of Kenneth J. Arrow, seven volumes, 1983-5.
- "Behavior under Uncertainty and its Implications for Policy", 1983, in Stigum
and Wenstop, editors, Foundations of Utility and Risk Theory
- "Team Thery and Decentralized Resource Allocation", 1983, in Desai, editor, Marxism,
Central Planning and the Soviet Union
- "The Potentials and Limits of the Market in Resource Allocation", 1985, in
Feiwel, editor, Issues in Contemporary Microeconomics and Welfare
- "Distributive Justice and Desirable Ends of Economic Activity", 1985, in
Feiwel, editor, Issues in Contemporary Microeconomics and Welfare
- "Informational Structure of the Firm", 1985, AER
- "Agency and the Market", 1986, in Arrow and Intriligator,
editors, Handbook of Mathematical Economics, Vol. III
- "Methodological Individualism and Social Knowledge", 1994, AER
- "Foreword",
1994, to W.B. Arthur, Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the
Economy
- "Some
General Observations on the Economics of Peace and War", 1994,
ECAAR Japan.
- "Judgemental Cuts in Consumer Price Indexation Are a Bad
Idea," with R. Solow and J. Tobin,
1997, FAS
- "Notes on Sequence Economies, Transaction Costs and Uncertainty", with F.H. Hahn , 1999, JET
- "How to
Grow: Review of Olson", 2000, Washington Monthly
- "Globalization and its Implications for International Security",
2000, ECAAR seminar
Resources on Kenneth J. Arrow
- HET Pages: Existence of Equilibrium, the Welfare Theorems, Local Stability, Global Stability, Choice under
Uncertainty: Risk-Aversion, State-Preference Approach, General Equilibrium under Uncertainty: State-Contingent Markets, Equilibrium with Asset Markets, Arrow's
Impossibility Theorem, Optimal
Growth Theory, Endogenous Growth Theory, the CES Production Function
- K.J. Arrow's Homepage
at Stanford.
- Autobiography
of Arrow at Nobel site.
- Press release of
Nobel award (1972).
- The Kenneth J. Arrow
Papers at Duke University.
- Profile at North-Holland
- Region's interview
with Arrow.
- "Information
and the Role of Public Policy" by K.J. Arrow, 2000
- "Individual Responsibility: For Self, for
Others" by K.J. Arrow, 1996
- "The
Rich Get Richer: debate between Arrow and Judd" at Uncommon
Knowledge, Hoover Institution
- "Three Brief Proofs of Arrow's Impossibility Theorem"
by John Geanakoplos
- K.J. Arrow's review
of Sen's 1981 book.
- Arrow in action!: Declaration
on Microsoft anti-trust suit and the AEI-Brookings
Regulatory Studies
- Arrow's letter to
Slate on Krugman and Arthur
- Arrow Page.at
Elsevier/North-Holland
- "Theory and Experiments with Markets" - Arrow and Plott at Ideachannel -- audio
& video (RAM)
- Arrow
page at Harvard
- Arrow Page at
Nobel Prize Internet Archive
- Another short bio of
Arrow.
- Short bio of Arrow at
Queens Univ.
- .Biography of Arrow
at Nobels for the Future.
- Arrow
page at the Vatican
- Arrow Page
in Germany
- Arrow page
at Britannica.com
- Arrow page
at Britannica Guide to the Nobel Prizes
- Kenneth
Arrow Award for Health Economics
- Citation from 1986
John
von Neumann Theory Prize from INFORMS
- Arrow page at PEI
- Arrow Page at Laura Forgette