Alfred Galichon | |
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![]() Alfred Galichon | |
Born | May 4th,1977 |
Nationality | French |
Alma mater | École Polytechnique, École des Mines, Harvard University[4] |
Awards | Edmond Malinvaud Prize of the French Association of Economic Sciences, 2015.[1] |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Quantitative Economics, Econometrics, Applied mathematics, Optimal Transport, Data Science. |
Institutions | Current: New York University Former: École Polytechnique, Sciences Po.[2] |
Doctoral advisor | Guido Imbens[3] |
Website | http://alfredgalichon.com/ |
Alfred Galichon (alfʁɛːd galiʃɔ̃; born May 4, 1977) is a French economist and mathematician.[4] His work focuses on quantitative economics and econometrics.[5] He is a professor of economics and of mathematics at New York University.[4][5]
Galichon was born in Paris. He is a professor at New York University in the Courant Institute, and the director of NYU Paris.[4][5][6] Previously, he had been a full professor at Ecole Polytechnique, and then at Sciences Po, Paris. He is a graduate of Ecole Polytechnique and Corps des Mines, and holds a PhD in Economics from Harvard University.[7]
His work lies within quantitative economics, in particular on the economic applications of optimal transport. He has contributed to the econometrics of matching markets, discrete choice models, martingale optimal transport, and quantile regression.[5][8]
He is a fellow of the Econometric Society[9] and the author of Optimal Transport Methods in Economics.[10]
Galichon is the author of more than forty peer-reviewed articles.[11] His research has been funded by the National Science Foundation (2017-2020) and twice by the European Research Council, for a total amount of approximately 3 million Euros.[12][13][14]