Thomas Philippon is the Max L. Heine Professor of Finance at New York University, Stern School of Business. Philippon was named one of the “top 25 economists under 45” by the IMF in 2014. He has won the 2013 Bernácer Prize for Best European Economist under 40, the 2010 Michael Brennan & BlackRock Award, the 2009 Prize for Best Young French Economist, and the 2008 Brattle Prize for the best paper in Corporate Finance. He was elected Fellow of the Econometric Society in 2020.
Philippon has studied various topics in macroeconomics and finance: systemic risk and financial crisis, the dynamics of corporate investment and household debt, financial innovation and financial regulation, Eurozone crisis. His recent book “The Great Reversal” (Harvard Press, 2019) focuses on the increasing market power of large firms.
He currently serves as co-editor of the Journal of Finance. He is a member of the Conseil d’analyse économique of the French government and of the Financial Advisory Roundtable of the New York Federal Reserve Bank. He was previously an advisor to the Financial Stability Board and to the Hong Kong Institute for Monetary and Financial Research, a board member of the French prudential regulatory authority from 2014 to 2019, and the senior economic advisor to the French finance minister from 2012 to 2013.
Philippon graduated from Ecole Polytechnique, received a PhD in Economics from MIT, and joined New York University in 2003.