Modigliani, Franco

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{{epname|Modigliani, Franco}}
 
{{epname|Modigliani, Franco}}
  
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'''Franco Modigliani''' (June 18, 1918 – September 25, 2003) was an [[Italy|Italian]]-born [[United States|American]] [[economics|economist]]. He was awarded the [[Nobel Prize]] for Economics in 1985 for his work on household [[saving]]s and the dynamics of financial markets. The Modigliani-Miller theorem, which he co-authored with [[Merton Miller]], represented a breakthrough in the theory of [[corporate finance]], with important implications for understanding [[investment]] decisions.
 +
{{toc}}
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Modigliani also developed the [[Life-Cycle Hypothesis]] as a counter to the classical [[Keynes]]ian model of spending, which stated that people increase their spending as their [[income]] increases. Modigliani proposed that consumers would aim for a stable level of income throughout their lifetime, saving during their working years and spending during their [[retirement]]. Unlike [[Milton Friedman]]'s model which assumed that people would save for their descendants, Modigliani claimed that people save only for their own retirement. The idea that people save for their old age is not a new one. Modigliani's contribution was in constructing a formal model that allowed [[macroeconomics|macroeconomic]] implications to be made. The Life-Cycle Hypothesis has thus proved as a useful tool in analyses of the effects of different [[pension]] systems. For a society to maintain its prosperity, all members must be encouraged to contribute as best they can to benefit the society as a whole, and the society must also care for their needs. As life expectancy rates have risen in many nations so have the numbers of older people, requiring a clear understanding of how to provide financial support for everyone, whether through pensions or individual savings. Modigliani's work has been valuable both in terms of analysing savings trends in the society as a whole, and in terms of understanding how best to provide for members of society as they age.
  
'''Franco Modigliani''' (June 18, 1918 – September 25, 2003) was an [[Italian-American]] [[economist]] at the [[MIT Sloan School of Management]] and [[MIT Department of Economics]], and winner of the [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics]] in 1985.
+
==Life==
 
 
Born in [[Italy]], he left Italy for the US in 1939 because of his Jewish background and antifascist views. In 1944 he obtained his Ph.D. from the [[New School for Social Research]] working under [[Jacob Marschak]]. In 1946, he became a [[naturalized citizen]] of the [[United States]], and in  1948, he joined the [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]] faculty.
 
 
 
When he was a professor at the [[Graduate School of Industrial Administration]] of [[Carnegie Mellon University]] in the 1950s and early 1960s, Modigliani made two path-breaking contributions to economic science:
 
 
 
*Along with [[Merton Miller]], he formulated the important [[Modigliani-Miller theorem]] in [[corporate finance]]. This demonstrated that under certain assumptions, the value of a firm is not affected by whether it is financed by equity (selling shares) or debt (borrowing money).
 
 
 
*He was also the originator of the [[life-cycle hypothesis]], which attempts to explain the level of [[saving]] in the economy.  Modigliani proposed that consumers would aim for a stable level of income throughout their lifetime, for example by saving during their working years and spending during their [[retirement]].
 
 
 
In 1962, he joined the faculty at MIT, achieving distinction as an [[Institute Professor]], where he stayed until his death.  Among his students was Nobel laureate [[Robert Merton]], the 1997 winner.
 
 
 
Modigliani also co-authored the textbooks, "Foundations of Financial Markets and Institutions" and "Capital Markets: Institutions and Instruments" with [[Frank J. Fabozzi]] of [[Yale School of Management]].
 
 
 
Active until the end, Modigliani enlisted fellow Nobel laureates [[Paul Samuelson]] and [[Robert Solow]] in 2003 to write a letter published in ''[[The New York Times]]'' chiding the [[Anti-Defamation League]] for honoring Italy's prime minister, [[Silvio Berlusconi]].  Berlusconi had recently defended [[Mussolini]]'s conduct toward Jews during [[World War II]].
 
 
 
Modigliani was a trustee of the [[Economists for Peace and Security]]
 
 
 
==Modigliani-Miller Theorem==
 
The '''Modigliani-Miller theorem''' (of [[Franco Modigliani]], [[Merton Miller]]) forms the basis for modern thinking on [[capital structure]]. The basic theorem states that, in the absence of [[tax]]es, [[bankruptcy]] costs, and [[asymmetric information]], and in an [[efficient market]], the value of a firm is unaffected by how that firm is financed.<ref>MIT Sloan Lecture Notes, Finance Theory II, Dirk Jenter, 2003</ref> It does not matter if the firm's capital is raised by issuing [[stock]] or selling debt.  It does not matter what the firm's [[dividend]] policy is. Therefore, the Modigliani-Miller theorem is also often called the '''capital structure irrelevance principle'''.
 
 
 
Merton Miller's analogy to illustrate the principle uses a [[pizza]]: cutting a pizza into more or less pieces does not change the underlying amount of pizza.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
Modigliani won the 1985 [[Nobel Prize in Economics]] for this and other contributions.
 
 
 
Miller won the 1990 [[Nobel Prize in Economics]], along with [[Harry Markowitz]] and [[William Sharpe]], for their "work in the theory of financial economics," with Miller specifically cited for "fundamental contributions to the theory of corporate finance."
 
 
 
 
 
=== Propositions  ===
 
 
 
The theorem was originally proved under the assumption of no taxes. It is made up of two propositions which can also be extended to a situation ''with'' taxes.
 
 
 
Consider two firms which are identical except for their financial structures. The first (Firm U) is '''unlevered''': that is, it is financed by '''equity''' only.  The other (Firm L) is levered: it is financed partly by equity, and partly by debt. The Modigliani-Miller theorem states that the value of the two firms is the same.
 
 
 
==== Without taxes ====
 
 
 
'''Proposition I:''' <math>V_U = V_L \,</math>
 
where <math>V_U</math> ''is the value of an unlevered firm'' = price of buying a firm composed only of equity, and <math>V_L</math> ''is the value of a levered firm'' = price of buying a firm that is composed of some mix of debt and equity.
 
 
 
To see why this should be true, suppose an investor is considering buying one of the two firms U or L. Instead of purchasing the shares of the levered firm L, he could purchase the shares of firm U and borrow the same amount of money B that firm L does.  The eventual returns to either of these investments would be the same. Therefore the price of L must be the same as the price of U minus the money borrowed B, which is the value of L's debt.
 
 
 
This discussion also clarifies the role of some of the theorem's assumptions.  We have implicitly assumed that the investor's cost of borrowing money is the same as that of the firm, which need not be true in the presence of asymmetric information or in the absence of efficient markets.
 
 
 
'''Proposition II:'''
 
[[Image:MM2.png|frame|right|Proposition II with risky debt. As [[leverage]] ([[Debt to equity ratio|D/E]]) increases, the [[WACC]] stays constant.]]
 
 
 
<math>y =c_0+ \frac{D}{E}\left( {c_0 - b } \right)
 
</math>
 
 
 
* <math>y</math> ''is the required rate of return on equity, or [[cost of equity]].''
 
* <math>c_0</math> ''is the cost of capital for an all equity firm.''
 
* <math>b</math> ''is the required rate of return on borrowings, or [[cost of debt]].''
 
* <math>{D}/{E}</math> ''is the debt-to-equity ratio.''
 
 
 
This proposition states that the cost of equity is a linear function of the firm's [[debt to equity ratio]]. A higher debt-to-equity ratio  leads to a higher required return on equity, because of the higher risk involved for equity-holders in a company with debt. The formula is derived from the theory of [[weighted average cost of capital]].
 
  
These propositions are true assuming the following assumptions:
+
'''Franco Modigliani''' was born on June 18, 1918 in [[Rome]], [[Italy]], the son of Enrico Modigliani and Olga Flaschel. His father was a famous [[physician]] and his mother a volunteer [[social work]]er. He received his basic education in Rome, and, despite the sudden loss of his father in 1932, an event that was quite traumatic to young Franco, he graduated early from the best [[high school]] and at the age of 17 enrolled at the [[University of Rome]]. Although his family wanted him to follow his father’s steps and become a physician, he chose [[law]] as his main [[education]]al track.  
* no taxes exist,
 
* no transaction costs exist, and
 
* individuals and corporations borrow at the same rates.
 
  
These results might seem irrelevant (after all, none of the conditions are met in the real world), but the theorem is still taught and studied because it tells us something very important. That is, if [[capital structure]] matters, it is precisely because one or more of the assumptions is violated.  It tells us where to look for determinants of optimal capital structure and how those factors might affect optimal capital structure.
+
In 1939, Modigliani married Serena Calabi, through whom he came in touch with the [[antifascist movement]]. He went briefly to [[Paris]], where he studied at the [[Sorbonne]]. He received his Doctor Juris degree from the University of Rome, in June 1939. He moved with his wife to the [[United States]] just a few days before the start of the [[World War II]].
  
==== With taxes ====
+
In 1939, Modigliani was awarded a free tuition fellowship by the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science of the [[New School for Social Research]]. There he completely turned his interest toward [[economics]] and [[econometrics]]. He obtained his Ph.D. working under [[Jacob Marschak]], whose ideas played an important role in the formation of Modigliani's own approach to economics. In 1946, Modigliani became a [[naturalized citizen]] of the [[United States]]. 
  
 +
Modigliani served as an instructor at [[New Jersey College for Women]] in 1941, and an instructor in economics and [[statistics]] at [[Bard College]] in 1942. In 1944, he returned to the New School as a Lecturer and a Research Associate at the Institute of World Affairs. There he published his first contributions to the study of [[saving]].
  
'''Proposition I:'''
+
In 1948, Modigliani joined the [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]] faculty. At the same time he was awarded the prestigious Political Economy Fellowship of the [[University of Chicago]]. During that time he started to collaborate with [[Richard Brumberg]], with whom he developed his "[[Life Cycle Hypothesis]] of Saving." Modigliani stayed in Chicago for only a year (1949-1950), and at the University of Illinois until 1952.
  
:<math>V_L =V_U + T_C D\,</math>
+
In 1952, Modigliani joined the staff at the Graduate School of Industrial Administration of [[Carnegie Mellon University]], staying there until 1960. From 1960 to 1962 he was professor of economics at [[Northwestern University]]. In 1962, he accepted position of a professor at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]], where he stayed for the reminder of his career. He became professor emeritus in 1988.
  
where
+
In the late sixties, Modigliani worked on the designing of a large scale model of the U.S. economy, sponsored by the [[Federal Reserve Bank]]. He also actively participated in the shaping of economic policies in [[Italy]]. He was a member of the [[National Academy of Sciences]] and the [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]. He also served as president of the Econometric Society, the American Economic Association, and the American Finance Association.
  
* <math>V_L</math> ''is the value of a levered firm.''
+
Franco Modigliani was awarded the [[Nobel Prize]] for Economics in 1985 for his work on household savings and the dynamics of financial markets.  
* <math>V_U</math> ''is the value of an unlevered firm.''
 
* <math>T_C D</math> ''is the tax rate (<math>T_C</math>) x the value of debt (D)''
 
  
This means that there are advantages for firms to be levered, since corporations can deduct interest payments. Therefore leverage lowers [[tax]] payments. [[Dividend]] payments are non-deductible.
+
Modigliani died in Cambridge, [[Massachusetts]], U.S. on September 25, 2003, at the age of 85.
  
'''Proposition II:'''
+
==Work==
:<math>y = c_0 + \frac{D}{E}\left( {c_0 - b } \right)(1-T_C)</math>
 
  
where
+
===Life-Cycle Hypothesis===
 +
Modigliani and his colleague Richard Brumberg, who unfortunately died suddenly in 1955, developed the [[Life-Cycle Hypothesis]], which attempts to explain the level of [[saving]] in the economy. Modigliani objected to the classical [[Keynes]]ian model of spending, which stated that people increase their spending as their [[income]] increases. The higher their income, the more money people spend.
  
* <math>y</math> ''is the required rate of return on equity, or [[cost of equity]].''
+
Modigliani instead proposed that consumers would aim for a stable level of income throughout their lifetime, for example by saving during their working years and spending during their [[retirement]]. [[Milton Friedman]] also worked on his own theory of savings, which he published three years after Modigliani. The two theories differ in the time frame involved: Modigliani hypothesized that people plan for their own retirement, whereas Friedman claimed that they save money for their descendants as well.  
* <math>c_0</math> ''is the cost of capital for an all equity firm.''
 
* <math>b</math> ''is the required rate of return on borrowings, or [[cost of debt]].''
 
* <math>{D}/{E}</math> ''is the debt-to-equity ratio.''
 
* <math>T_c</math> ''is the tax rate.''
 
  
The same relationship as earlier described stating that the cost of equity rises with leverage, because the risk to equity rises, still holds. The formula however has implications for the difference with the [[WACC]].
+
The Life-Cycle Hypothesis has long-term implications in economic science. The idea that people save for their old age is of course not a new one. Modigliani's contribution was in constructing a formal model that he integrated into well-defined economic theory, and in his drawing [[macroeconomics|macroeconomic]] implications from the model. It showed that aggregate saving depends primarily upon the rate of growth of the economy. It also revealed that aggregate saving depends on economic as well as [[demography|demographic]] factors, like age structure of the population and the life expectation. The Life-Cycle Hypothesis has thus proved as a useful tool in analyses of the effects of different [[pension]] systems.
  
The following assumptions are made in the propositions with taxes:
+
===Modigliani-Miller theorem===
* corporations are taxed at the rate <math>T_C</math> on earnings after interest,
+
Modigliani and [[Merton Miller]] published their famous ''The Cost of Capital, Corporate Finance and the Theory of Investment'' in 1958. The paper urged a fundamental objection to the traditional view of corporate finance, according to which a [[corporation]] can reduce its [[cost of capital]] by finding the right [[debt-to-equity ratio]]. According to Modigliani and Miller, however, there was no right ratio, so corporate managers should seek to minimize [[tax]] [[liability]] and maximize corporate net wealth, letting the debt ratio chips fall where they will. Modigliani and Miller also claimed that the real market value of a company depends mostly on investors' expectations of what the company will earn in the future, not the company's debt-to-equity ratio.
* no transaction cost exist, and
 
* individuals and corporations borrow at the same rate
 
  
Miller and Modigliani published a number of follow-up papers discussing some of these issues.
+
The way in which Modigliani and Miller arrived at their conclusion made use of the "no [[arbitrage]]" argument, that is the [[premise (argument)|premise]] that any state of affairs that will allow traders of any market instrument to create a riskless money machine will almost immediately disappear. They set the pattern for many arguments in subsequent years based on that premise.
  
 +
The Modigliani-Miller theorem forms the basis for modern thinking on [[capital structure]]. The basic theorem states that, in the absence of [[tax]]es, [[bankruptcy]] costs, and [[asymmetric information]], and in an [[efficient market]], the value of a firm is unaffected by how that firm is financed. It does not matter if the firm's [[capital]] is raised by issuing [[stock]] or selling debt. It does not matter what the firm's [[dividend]] policy is. Therefore, the Modigliani-Miller theorem is also often called the '''capital structure irrelevance principle'''.
  
 +
The theorem was originally proved under the assumption of no [[tax]]es, but can also be extended to a situation ''with'' taxes. Consider two firms that are identical except for their financial structures. The first (Firm U) is '''unlevered''': that is, it is financed by equity only. The other (Firm L) is '''levered''': it is financed partly by equity, and partly by debt. The Modigliani-Miller theorem states that the value of the two firms is the same.
  
 +
==Legacy==
  
== Footnotes ==
+
[[Paul Samuelson]], a good friend of Modigliani and a fellow [[Nobel Prize|Nobelist]], said, "Franco Modigliani could have been a multiple Nobel winner. When he died he was the greatest living [[macroeconomics|macroeconomist]]. He revised [[Keynes]]ian economics from its [[Ford Model T|Model-T]], [[Neanderthal]], [[Great Depression]] model to its modern-day form" (Sales 2003).
<references/>
 
  
== References ==
+
Modigliani’s theory of life cycles helped explain the varying rates of savings in societies dominated by younger or older population. His models were successfully used in predicting the future effects of various pension plans. In addition, the methods Modigliani invented for calculating the future value of a company became basic tools in corporate decision making and finance.
* Brealy and Myers, ''Principles of Corporate Finance''.
 
* G. Bennett Stewart III, ''The Quest for Value'' (HarperCollins, 1991).
 
*F. Modigliani and M. Miller, "The Cost of Capital, Corporation Finance and the Theory of Investment," ''American Economic Review'' (June 1958).
 
*M. Miller and F. Modigliani: "Corporate income taxes and the cost of capital: a correction." ''American Economic Review'', 53 (3) (1963), pp. 433-443.
 
*J. Miles und J. Ezzell: "The weighted average cost of capital, perfect capital markets and project life: a clarification." ''Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis'', 15 (1980), S. 719-730.
 
  
 +
Modigliani influenced many generations of students, among others [[Robert C. Merton]], the 1997 winner of the Nobel Prize in economics.
  
== External links ==
+
==Publications==
* [http://www.nobel.se/economics/laureates/1985/modigliani-autobio.html Franco Modigliani autobiography]
 
* [http://www.nobel-winners.com/Economics/franco_modigliani.html About Franco Modigliani from nobel-winners.com]
 
* [http://mitsloan.mit.edu/fm-memorial/ Memorial for Franco Modigliani - MIT Sloan]
 
* [http://kilop.atspace.com/modigliani-press.html his pioneering analyses of saving and of financial markets.]
 
*[http://www.geocities.com/econ_555jim/modigliani-autobio.html School performance in the early years was good though not outstanding]
 
  
* [http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Sloan-School-of-Management/15-402Finance-Theory-IISpring2003/96178A76-03FF-426A-8AE6-5A6F014F8BF1/0/lec10awrapupfinancing.pdf MIT Sloan Lecture Notes, Finance Theory II, Dirk Jenter, 2003]
+
* Fabozzi, Frank J., and Franco Modigliani. 1996. ''Capital markets: institutions and instruments''. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0133001873
 +
* Modigliani, Franco. 1944. "Liquidity Preference and the Theory of Interest and Money." ''Econometrica, 12'', 45-88
 +
* Modigliani, Franco. 1958. "New Developments on the Oligopoly Front." ''Journal of Political Economy, 66'', 215-32
 +
* Modigliani, Franco. 1977. "The Monetarist Controversy or should we forsake stabilization policies." ''American Economic Review, 67''(2), 1-19
 +
* Modigliani, Franco. 1986. ''The debate over stabilization policy''. Raffaele Mattioli lectures. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521267900
 +
* Modigliani, Franco. 1987. ''The European economic recovery: a need for new policies?'' Stockholm, Sweden: Industrial Institute for Economic and Social Research. ISBN 9172042931
 +
* Modigliani, Franco. 1988. "The Role of Intergenerational Transfers and Life-Cycle Saving in the Accumulation of Wealth." ''Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2''(2), 15-40.
 +
* Modigliani, Franco, and Richard Brumberg. 1954. "Utility analysis and the consumption function: An interpretation of cross-section data" in Kenneth K. Kurihara (ed.) ''Post-Keynesian Economics'' Rutgers University Press.
 +
* Modigliani, Franco, Andrew B. Abel, and Simon Johnson. 1980. ''The collected papers of Franco Modigliani.'' Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press. ISBN 0262131501
 +
* Modigliani, F., and M. Miller. 1958. "The Cost of Capital, Corporation Finance and the Theory of Investment." ''American Economic Review'', ''48''(3), 261-297
 +
* Modigliani, F., and M. Miller. 1963. "Corporate income taxes and the cost of capital: a correction." ''American Economic Review'', ''53''(3), 433-443.
  
* [http://courses.essex.ac.uk/EC/EC372/ec372mm.pdf Corporate Finance: The Modigliani-Miller Theorems]
+
==References==
  
* [http://rdcohen.50megs.com/MMabstract.htm '''Ruben D Cohen''' "An Implication of the Modigliani-Miller Capital Structuring Theorems on the Relation between Equity and Debt"]
+
* Brealey, Richard A. and Stewart C. Myers. 1984. ''Principles of corporate finance''. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 007007383X 
 +
* McCarty, Marilu H. 2000. ''The Nobel laureates how the world's greatest economic minds shaped modern thought''. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0071356142
 +
* Miles, J., and J. Ezzell. 1980. "The weighted average cost of capital, perfect capital markets and project life: A clarification." ''Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis'', ''15'', 719-730.
 +
* Ramrattan, Lall and Michael Szenberg. 2004. "Franco Modigliani: 1918-2003, In Memoriam." ''The American Economist, 48'' (1), 3.
 +
* Sales, Robert J. 2003. [http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2003/modigliani.html Nobel laureate Franco Modigliani dies at 85]. News Office, MIT. Retrieved November 17, 2007.
 +
* Stewart, G. Bennett. 1991. ''The quest for value: A guide for senior managers''. New York, NY: HarperBusiness. ISBN 0887304184 
 +
* Szego, G. 2004. "Franco Modigliani (1918-2003)." ''Journal of Banking & Finance, 28'' (8), 3.
 +
* Szenberg, Michael, and Lall Ramrattan. 2008. ''Franco Modigliani an intellectual biography. Great thinkers in economics.'' Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0230007899
  
 +
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved April 9, 2024.
  
 +
* [http://kilop.atspace.com/modigliani-press.html 1985 Alfred Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences] – On Modigliani’s work that led him to Nobel Prize
 +
* [http://www.nobel-winners.com/Economics/franco_modigliani.html Franco Modigliani] – Short biography on Nobel-winners.com
  
 +
{{Nobel laureates in economics 1976-2000}}
 
{{credits|Franco_Modigliani|136121294|Modigliani-Miller_theorem|146707666|}}
 
{{credits|Franco_Modigliani|136121294|Modigliani-Miller_theorem|146707666|}}

Latest revision as of 04:56, 9 April 2024

Franco Modigliani (June 18, 1918 – September 25, 2003) was an Italian-born American economist. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1985 for his work on household savings and the dynamics of financial markets. The Modigliani-Miller theorem, which he co-authored with Merton Miller, represented a breakthrough in the theory of corporate finance, with important implications for understanding investment decisions.

Modigliani also developed the Life-Cycle Hypothesis as a counter to the classical Keynesian model of spending, which stated that people increase their spending as their income increases. Modigliani proposed that consumers would aim for a stable level of income throughout their lifetime, saving during their working years and spending during their retirement. Unlike Milton Friedman's model which assumed that people would save for their descendants, Modigliani claimed that people save only for their own retirement. The idea that people save for their old age is not a new one. Modigliani's contribution was in constructing a formal model that allowed macroeconomic implications to be made. The Life-Cycle Hypothesis has thus proved as a useful tool in analyses of the effects of different pension systems. For a society to maintain its prosperity, all members must be encouraged to contribute as best they can to benefit the society as a whole, and the society must also care for their needs. As life expectancy rates have risen in many nations so have the numbers of older people, requiring a clear understanding of how to provide financial support for everyone, whether through pensions or individual savings. Modigliani's work has been valuable both in terms of analysing savings trends in the society as a whole, and in terms of understanding how best to provide for members of society as they age.

Life

Franco Modigliani was born on June 18, 1918 in Rome, Italy, the son of Enrico Modigliani and Olga Flaschel. His father was a famous physician and his mother a volunteer social worker. He received his basic education in Rome, and, despite the sudden loss of his father in 1932, an event that was quite traumatic to young Franco, he graduated early from the best high school and at the age of 17 enrolled at the University of Rome. Although his family wanted him to follow his father’s steps and become a physician, he chose law as his main educational track.

In 1939, Modigliani married Serena Calabi, through whom he came in touch with the antifascist movement. He went briefly to Paris, where he studied at the Sorbonne. He received his Doctor Juris degree from the University of Rome, in June 1939. He moved with his wife to the United States just a few days before the start of the World War II.

In 1939, Modigliani was awarded a free tuition fellowship by the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science of the New School for Social Research. There he completely turned his interest toward economics and econometrics. He obtained his Ph.D. working under Jacob Marschak, whose ideas played an important role in the formation of Modigliani's own approach to economics. In 1946, Modigliani became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

Modigliani served as an instructor at New Jersey College for Women in 1941, and an instructor in economics and statistics at Bard College in 1942. In 1944, he returned to the New School as a Lecturer and a Research Associate at the Institute of World Affairs. There he published his first contributions to the study of saving.

In 1948, Modigliani joined the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign faculty. At the same time he was awarded the prestigious Political Economy Fellowship of the University of Chicago. During that time he started to collaborate with Richard Brumberg, with whom he developed his "Life Cycle Hypothesis of Saving." Modigliani stayed in Chicago for only a year (1949-1950), and at the University of Illinois until 1952.

In 1952, Modigliani joined the staff at the Graduate School of Industrial Administration of Carnegie Mellon University, staying there until 1960. From 1960 to 1962 he was professor of economics at Northwestern University. In 1962, he accepted position of a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he stayed for the reminder of his career. He became professor emeritus in 1988.

In the late sixties, Modigliani worked on the designing of a large scale model of the U.S. economy, sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank. He also actively participated in the shaping of economic policies in Italy. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He also served as president of the Econometric Society, the American Economic Association, and the American Finance Association.

Franco Modigliani was awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1985 for his work on household savings and the dynamics of financial markets.

Modigliani died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. on September 25, 2003, at the age of 85.

Work

Life-Cycle Hypothesis

Modigliani and his colleague Richard Brumberg, who unfortunately died suddenly in 1955, developed the Life-Cycle Hypothesis, which attempts to explain the level of saving in the economy. Modigliani objected to the classical Keynesian model of spending, which stated that people increase their spending as their income increases. The higher their income, the more money people spend.

Modigliani instead proposed that consumers would aim for a stable level of income throughout their lifetime, for example by saving during their working years and spending during their retirement. Milton Friedman also worked on his own theory of savings, which he published three years after Modigliani. The two theories differ in the time frame involved: Modigliani hypothesized that people plan for their own retirement, whereas Friedman claimed that they save money for their descendants as well.

The Life-Cycle Hypothesis has long-term implications in economic science. The idea that people save for their old age is of course not a new one. Modigliani's contribution was in constructing a formal model that he integrated into well-defined economic theory, and in his drawing macroeconomic implications from the model. It showed that aggregate saving depends primarily upon the rate of growth of the economy. It also revealed that aggregate saving depends on economic as well as demographic factors, like age structure of the population and the life expectation. The Life-Cycle Hypothesis has thus proved as a useful tool in analyses of the effects of different pension systems.

Modigliani-Miller theorem

Modigliani and Merton Miller published their famous The Cost of Capital, Corporate Finance and the Theory of Investment in 1958. The paper urged a fundamental objection to the traditional view of corporate finance, according to which a corporation can reduce its cost of capital by finding the right debt-to-equity ratio. According to Modigliani and Miller, however, there was no right ratio, so corporate managers should seek to minimize tax liability and maximize corporate net wealth, letting the debt ratio chips fall where they will. Modigliani and Miller also claimed that the real market value of a company depends mostly on investors' expectations of what the company will earn in the future, not the company's debt-to-equity ratio.

The way in which Modigliani and Miller arrived at their conclusion made use of the "no arbitrage" argument, that is the premise that any state of affairs that will allow traders of any market instrument to create a riskless money machine will almost immediately disappear. They set the pattern for many arguments in subsequent years based on that premise.

The Modigliani-Miller theorem forms the basis for modern thinking on capital structure. The basic theorem states that, in the absence of taxes, bankruptcy costs, and asymmetric information, and in an efficient market, the value of a firm is unaffected by how that firm is financed. It does not matter if the firm's capital is raised by issuing stock or selling debt. It does not matter what the firm's dividend policy is. Therefore, the Modigliani-Miller theorem is also often called the capital structure irrelevance principle.

The theorem was originally proved under the assumption of no taxes, but can also be extended to a situation with taxes. Consider two firms that are identical except for their financial structures. The first (Firm U) is unlevered: that is, it is financed by equity only. The other (Firm L) is levered: it is financed partly by equity, and partly by debt. The Modigliani-Miller theorem states that the value of the two firms is the same.

Legacy

Paul Samuelson, a good friend of Modigliani and a fellow Nobelist, said, "Franco Modigliani could have been a multiple Nobel winner. When he died he was the greatest living macroeconomist. He revised Keynesian economics from its Model-T, Neanderthal, Great Depression model to its modern-day form" (Sales 2003).

Modigliani’s theory of life cycles helped explain the varying rates of savings in societies dominated by younger or older population. His models were successfully used in predicting the future effects of various pension plans. In addition, the methods Modigliani invented for calculating the future value of a company became basic tools in corporate decision making and finance.

Modigliani influenced many generations of students, among others Robert C. Merton, the 1997 winner of the Nobel Prize in economics.

Publications

  • Fabozzi, Frank J., and Franco Modigliani. 1996. Capital markets: institutions and instruments. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0133001873
  • Modigliani, Franco. 1944. "Liquidity Preference and the Theory of Interest and Money." Econometrica, 12, 45-88
  • Modigliani, Franco. 1958. "New Developments on the Oligopoly Front." Journal of Political Economy, 66, 215-32
  • Modigliani, Franco. 1977. "The Monetarist Controversy or should we forsake stabilization policies." American Economic Review, 67(2), 1-19
  • Modigliani, Franco. 1986. The debate over stabilization policy. Raffaele Mattioli lectures. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521267900
  • Modigliani, Franco. 1987. The European economic recovery: a need for new policies? Stockholm, Sweden: Industrial Institute for Economic and Social Research. ISBN 9172042931
  • Modigliani, Franco. 1988. "The Role of Intergenerational Transfers and Life-Cycle Saving in the Accumulation of Wealth." Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2(2), 15-40.
  • Modigliani, Franco, and Richard Brumberg. 1954. "Utility analysis and the consumption function: An interpretation of cross-section data" in Kenneth K. Kurihara (ed.) Post-Keynesian Economics Rutgers University Press.
  • Modigliani, Franco, Andrew B. Abel, and Simon Johnson. 1980. The collected papers of Franco Modigliani. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press. ISBN 0262131501
  • Modigliani, F., and M. Miller. 1958. "The Cost of Capital, Corporation Finance and the Theory of Investment." American Economic Review, 48(3), 261-297
  • Modigliani, F., and M. Miller. 1963. "Corporate income taxes and the cost of capital: a correction." American Economic Review, 53(3), 433-443.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Brealey, Richard A. and Stewart C. Myers. 1984. Principles of corporate finance. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 007007383X
  • McCarty, Marilu H. 2000. The Nobel laureates how the world's greatest economic minds shaped modern thought. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0071356142
  • Miles, J., and J. Ezzell. 1980. "The weighted average cost of capital, perfect capital markets and project life: A clarification." Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 15, 719-730.
  • Ramrattan, Lall and Michael Szenberg. 2004. "Franco Modigliani: 1918-2003, In Memoriam." The American Economist, 48 (1), 3.
  • Sales, Robert J. 2003. Nobel laureate Franco Modigliani dies at 85. News Office, MIT. Retrieved November 17, 2007.
  • Stewart, G. Bennett. 1991. The quest for value: A guide for senior managers. New York, NY: HarperBusiness. ISBN 0887304184
  • Szego, G. 2004. "Franco Modigliani (1918-2003)." Journal of Banking & Finance, 28 (8), 3.
  • Szenberg, Michael, and Lall Ramrattan. 2008. Franco Modigliani an intellectual biography. Great thinkers in economics. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0230007899

External links

All links retrieved April 9, 2024.

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