Martin Shubik


Martin Shubik was an American mathematical economist who specialized in game theory, defense analysis, and the theory of money. The latter was his main research interest and he referred to it as his "white whale". He also coined the term "mathematical institutional economics" in 1959 to describe his scholarly approach to studying the economy. He spent the majority of his career at Yale University, where he was heavily involved with the Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, and launched the virtual .
Outside of economics, he began studying inclusion body myositis after a 2003 diagnosis. He provided seed money to the Yale School of Public Health for the in 2011, a survey was conducted in 2012–2013, and he is a co-author on a 2015 paper about the initial results.

Personal life

Martin Shubik was born on 24 March 1926 in New York City, New York to Joseph and Sara Shubik . However, Joseph Shubik worked for a Scottish flax and linen company and the family returned to London when Martin Shubik was just three months old. He remained in England until World War II, when he, Sara Shubik, and younger sister Irene Shubik were sent to join relatives in Canada, while Joseph Shubik and older brother Philippe Shubik stayed behind. To fulfill a condition of enrollment in college in Canada during the War, Martin Shubik enlisted in the Royal Canadian Navy and held the rank of Lieutenant before retiring in 1950.
Shubik was married to Julie Kahn and had one child, Claire Louise Shubik. Irene Shubik became a British television producer and Philippe Shubik a cancer researcher.

Education

Shubik earned a BA in mathematics and MA in Political Economy from the University of Toronto and an AM and PhD in Economics from Princeton University, where his dissertation was supervised by Oskar Morgenstern. His other teachers included Albert Tucker, John von Neumann, and Jacob Viner; his roommates were future Nobel Prize winners Lloyd Shapley and John Nash; and his classmates included Thomas Whitin, Otto Eckstein, Gary Becker, Marvin Minsky, John McCarthy, Herbert Scarf, Ralph Gomory, Richard Karlin, Alan Hoffman, and Harlan Mills.
Shubik and Shapley used the Shapley value to formulate the Shapley-Shubik power index in 1954 to measure the power of players in a voting game.
Shubik's curriculum vitae lists over 20 books and 300 articles, with Shapley being his most frequent collaborator. Nash also appears twice, including with Shapley and Mel Hausner on "So Long Sucker - A Four Person Game" about a board game that they invented.

Teaching and other employment

Before fully committing to academia, Shubik spent time at General Electric Company as a Consultant in Management Consultation Services from 1956 to 1960 and International Business Machines Corporation as a Staff Member in the T. J. Watson Research Laboratories from 1961 to 1963. During his life, he served as a consultant and expert witness for many other companies, organizations, and government agencies. Later in life, he was an External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute from 1995 to 2018.
Shubik spent the majority of his career at Yale University, where he was Professor of the Economics of Organization from 1963 to 1975, then the Seymour H. Knox Professor of Mathematical Institutional Economics from 1975 until his retirement in 2007. He was also Director of the Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics from 1973 to 1976 and a founding faculty member of the Yale School of Management. He taught courses in economics, game theory, and investment theory and practice.

Awards and honors

Shubik's awards included the Frederick W. Lanchester Prize for, the Koopman Prize with Jerome Bracken from the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences, Fellow of Econometric Society, Medal of College de France, Fellow of American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Honorary Professor of University of Vienna, and he was a Distinguished Fellow of the American Economic Association.

Other selected publications

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