Gregory Chow

Gregory Chow
Born (1930-12-25) December 25, 1930 (age 93)
NationalityChinese, American
Alma materUniversity of Chicago AM 1952, PhD 1955
Cornell University BA 1951
Lingnan University 1947
Known forEconometrics, Dynamical economics, Chinese economy
Scientific career
FieldsEconomics, Econometrics
InstitutionsXiamen University[1]
Princeton 1970–present
Rutgers 1969
Harvard 1967
Columbia 1965–1971
Thomas J. Watson 1962–1970
MIT 1955–1959
Cornell 1952–1962,1964
Doctoral advisorArnold Harberger

Gregory Chi-Chong Chow (simplified Chinese: 邹至庄; traditional Chinese: 鄒至莊; pinyin: Zōu Zhìzhuāng; born December 25, 1930) is a Chinese-American economist at Princeton University and Xiamen University. The Chow test, commonly used in econometrics to test for structural breaks, was invented by him. He has also been influential in the economic policy of China, including being an adviser for the Economic Planning and Development Council of the Executive Yuan in Taiwan, and being an adviser for the Chinese State Commission for Restructuring the Economic System on economic reform.[2]

  1. ^ "Committee of Academic Consultants". Wise.xmu.edu.cn. Retrieved 2015-03-17.
  2. ^ Chow, Gregory (2010) "Important Lessons From Studying the Chinese Economy" Singapore Economic Review, 55 (3), 419-434

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