His doctoral supervisor was Kenneth Arrow, a Nobel laureate.
Previous publications on non-convexity and economics were collected in an annotated bibliography by Kenneth Arrow.
Kenneth Arrow (1963) showed a difficulty of trying to extend a social welfare function consistently across different hypothetical ordinal utility functions even apart from justice.
Kenneth Arrow (1963) generalizes the analysis.
In the field of economics, the first formal treatment of this topic was given by Kenneth Arrow in the 1960s.
His dissertation was supervised by Kenneth Arrow.
In the 1950s, he worked with Kenneth Arrow on non-linear programming.
Kenneth Arrow became the youngest person to receive the Nobel Economics prize in 1972.
The Arrow information paradox, named after Kenneth Arrow, is a problem that companies face when managing intellectual property across their boundaries.
Kenneth Arrow believed that it offered "one of the most significant contributions of the postwar period to our understanding of economic behavior".