Are economists good at business?

Does academic study of economics lend one an acute business sense?

An employee counts Indian rupees at a cash counter in a Mumbai bank on June 21. Some economists take on business ventures - does academic study of economics offer an acute business sense?

Rupak de Chowdhuri/Reuters/File

July 8, 2010

Some tenured economists write fewer papers and spend more time in public consulting (i.e Washington DC) or in private consulting (i.e anti-trust litigation). Some start their own businesses. Paul Romer's success with Aplia is well documented but there are other cases. This Story about Barry Nalebuff's success with Honest Tea and the saga of what happens when his small startup was bought up by Coca-Cola was pretty interesting.

I wonder what other businesses have economists tried to launch? We know that some real estate economists have developed information companies providing forecasts and newsletters focused on industry trends in specific local real estate markets.

Are economists more successful than other people in starting firms that succeed? How many Fortune 500 firms have a CEO who has a Ph.D in econ? I see that my old friend Bryan Tyler from our graduate school days is having a very successful career in business. Does our University of Chicago economics training deserve any of the credit for his success?

The analytic approach emphasized at the Chicago's Business School, Wharton, and Stanford's GSB maked me think that our training must have some payoff in the business world. Now, I must admit that my interest here is not on Wall Street --- I mean at the Fortune 500 or companies such as Google --- are economists valuable people? I need to believe so.

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