born Sept. 15, 1937, Yakima, Wash., U.S.
U.S. economist.
He studied at the University of Chicago and began teaching there in 1975. He questioned the influence of macroeconomics and the efficacy of government intervention in domestic affairs. He criticized the Phillips curve for failing to provide for the dampened expectations of companies and workers in an inflationary economy. His theory of rational expectations, which suggests that individuals may alter the expected results of national fiscal policy by making private economic decisions based on anticipated results, won him the 1995 Nobel Prize. See also econometrics ; inflation .