Lars Stole studies strategic pricing, contracts and incentives theory, industrial economics and game theory. Stole’s research has appeared in the American Economic Review, Econometrica,the Review of Economic Studies, the Journal of Political Economy and Games and Economic Behavior. He has made numerous contributions to the theory of strategic price discrimination, including a comprehensive survey of price discrimination in competitive environments which appeared in the Handbook of Industrial Organization.

Stole has been awarded several prizes for his research, including an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, a National Science Foundation Presidential Faculty Fellowship, and an Olin Fellowship in Law and Economics from the Harvard Law School. In the past, he has lectured at MIT, CERGE/Prague, and CES/Munich, and he has served as Editor of the RAND Journal of Economics. He is Co-Director of the Applied Theory Initiative, which he founded in 2009.

Stole earned bachelor degrees in Political Science and Economics from the University of Illinois, a Masters of Science in Economics from the London School of Economics, and a PhD in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Outside of academia, Stole enjoys turning wood, working metal and tinkering with machinery.

 

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