Bertil Ohlin(1899)
EconomicsBertil Ohlin is a recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics (1977) from Sweden. Their primary field is Economics. They were educated at Harvard University and Lund University. They have been affiliated with Stockholm School of Economics.
Sweden
1
Major Awards
22
Publications
83
Citations
4
h-index
N/A
i10-index
3.8
Avg Citations/Paper
Awards & Recognition
Nobel Prize in Economics
1977for their pathbreaking contribution to the theory of international trade and international capital movements
Stockholm School of EconomicsMost Cited Works
Top publications by citation count#3
2
citations
#5
Professor Lindahl om dynamisk teori. reflexioner kring "Studies in the Theory of Money and Capital"
(1941)
1
citations
#7
0
citations
#8
1
citations
#9
14
citations
Recent Publications
View all works7citations
0citations
13citations
Education
Harvard University
Lund University
Stockholm University
Stockholm School of Economics
Lund School of Economics and Management
Doctoral Advisor
Gustav Cassel
Career Timeline
Stockholm School of Economics?–present
University of Copenhagen?–present
Positions & Roles
professorchairpersonparty leaderMinister of TradePresident of the Nordic Councilmember of the First ChamberRepresentative of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europesubstitute member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europemember of the Second Chamber
Academy Memberships
American Academy of Arts and SciencesRoyal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Related Laureates
Other winners of the same award(s)
JM
Joel Mokyr
Nobel Prize in Economics (2025)
PA
Philippe Aghion
Nobel Prize in Economics (2025)
PH
Peter Howitt
Nobel Prize in Economics (2025)
DA
Daron Acemoglu
Nobel Prize in Economics (2024)
JA
James A. Robinson
Nobel Prize in Economics (2024)
SJ
Simon Johnson
Nobel Prize in Economics (2024)
DA
Daron Acemoğlu
Nobel Prize in Economics (2024)
CG
Claudia Goldin
Nobel Prize in Economics (2023)
Data Sources
Profile data aggregated from Semantic Scholar, Wikidata, and curated award records. Citation metrics may vary between sources.
