Prof
of Agricultural and Resource Economics, U of California at Berkeley,
1989-present; Assoc Prof, 1982-1989; Assistant Prof, 1980-1982
Asst
Prof of Economics, U of Pennsylvania, 1976-1980
PhD,
M.I.T., 1976 · BA, U of Chicago, 1972
AJAE
Associate Editor 1987-1991
Industrial
Relations Editor 9/1994 - 9/1996
Journal
of Productivity Analysis Associate Editor 2003-present
Journal
of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization, Advisory Board
2003-present
AAEA
representative to NBER Board of Directors 2003-present
Advisor
to U. S. Departs of Commerce and Labor, study, 1978
Federal
Trade Commission, expert witness, 1978, 1979
Consultant
to the Bureau of Economics, 1980
Advisor
to U. S. Department of Commerce, dumping investigation
Advisor
to U. S. Labor Department, studies, 1978, 1979, 1980
Advisor
to U. S. Postal Service, labor negotiations, various years
Advisor
to National Commission for Manpower Policy, study, 1978
Advisor
to U.S. Department of Agriculture, statistical advisor on the
National Agricultural Workers Survey (with Aguirre International);
cooperative agreements
California
Employment Development Department, created computerized agricultural
labor database, various studies, 1991, 1992, 1994
Advisor
to U. S. Department of Justice, merger case
General
Accounting Office, panel on market power and pricing in the cattle
market
Advisor
to California Attorney General, energy, 2002-present
Advisor
to Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, National Academies:
Future of Supercomputing committee, 2003-present
Jeffrey
Perloff's research has concentrated on how institutions, laws,
and government policies affect markets. His work covers many areas
of agricultural economics, including industrial organization (theory,
empirical, effects of agricultural policies, antitrust), marketing,
labor (education, macro, micro, effects of government policies
on labor and health, income distribution), trade, natural resources,
law and economics, public finance, and econometrics. In addition,
he has published in psychology and statistics.
He received a Ph.D. in economics from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. His first academic position was in the Economics
Department at the University of Pennsylvania. Since 1981, he has
been a faculty member in the Department of Agricultural and Resource
Economics, University of California, Berkeley. He is currently
the vice chair of that department. He has consulted widely with
government agencies including the Federal Trade Commission; the
U.S. Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Labor, and Justice;
and various California agencies.
He is very committed to teaching. He is the author of two of the
world's best selling economics textbooks: Microeconomics and Modern
Industrial Organization (with Dennis W. Carlton). Modern Industrial
Organization has been translated into French, Chinese, Italian,
and other languages. He has coauthored many papers with his graduate
students. He chairs Berkeley's campus-wide committee that oversees
the Professional Development Program for minority and other students.
Probably his most widely cited research is his work on information
and oligopoly behavior with Steve Salop (Review of Economics Studies
1985, Oxford Economics Papers 1986), which forms the theoretical
underpinnings of random utility models of oligopoly with product
diversity used in many recent empirical studies. His other well-known
works on industrial organization and government policies include
papers with Larry Karp on dynamic oligopoly (Review of Economics
and Statistics 1989, AJAE 1993, International Journal of Industrial
Organization 1993); with Amos Golan and Karp on estimating mixed
strategy oligopoly models (an application to Coke and Pepsi in
the Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 2000); and with
Peter Berck on agricultural marketing orders (AJAE 1985).
He has many papers on trade including the effects of tariffs in
markets with vertical restraints (Journal of International Economics
with Fargeix) and with Larry Karp on strategic trade (e.g., International
Economic Review 1993). His research on natural resources includes
papers on fisheries with Peter Berck (Economerica 1984, AJAE 1985)
and with Dennis Carlton on price discrimination in natural resources
markets (Resources and Energy 1981).
In recent years he has written many papers developing maximum
entropy techniques and applying them. Two of the most important
theoretical papers are with Amos Golan and George Judge (Journal
of the American Statistical Association 1996, Journal of Econometrics
1997). Applications include estimating agricultural workers' choice
between hourly and piece rate employment (AJAE 1999), meat demand
systems taking account of nonnegative constraints (Review of Economics
and Statistics 2001 with Golan and Edward Z. Shen), and agricultural
supply response functions (Journal of Economics 2001 with Shen).
He has also published widely on agricultural labor markets. His
papers include studies the effects of job site sanitation on workers'
health (AJAE 1988 with George Frisvold and Richard Mines), impact
of wage differentials on choosing to work in agriculture (AJAE
1991), choice of housing tenure and wage compensation of hired
agricultural workers (AJAE 1991), migration of seasonal workers
(AJAE 1998 with Lori Lynch and Susan Gabbard), efficiency wages
and deferred payment (AJAE 2002 with Enrico Moretti), and many
other topics.