Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Nobel laureate economist faces sex harassment investigat­ion

- By Heather Hollingswo­rth

A U.S. university is investigat­ing a Nobel laureate over sexual harassment allegation­s that the economist’s attorney dismisses as “profession­al rivalry.”

Philip Dybvig, who shared this year’s Nobel Prize in economics for research into bank failures, has been questioned in the past several weeks by the Title IX office at Washington University in St. Louis, his lawyer Andrew Miltenberg told The Associated Press.

Miltenberg said the allegation­s are “factually inaccurate.” Dybvig, a longtime banking and finance professor at the university, didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email message seeking comment.

Dybvig, fellow economist Douglas W. Diamond and former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke won the Nobel Prize in economics in October for research into bank failures — work that built on lessons learned in the Great Depression and helped shape America’s aggressive response to the 2007-2008 financial crisis. The findings in the early 1980s laid the foundation­s for regulating financial markets, the Nobel panel said.

The Nobel panel at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, in recognizin­g the three winners, said their research showed “why avoiding bank collapses is vital.”

Bloomberg News reported that it has reviewed emails that show that the Title IX office, which handles campus sexual harassment complaints, has reached out to at least three former students since October to interview them about claims involving Dybvig. They’re among a group of seven former students Bloomberg reported it had spoken with who allege Dybvig sexually harassed them. Most of the women Bloomberg interviewe­d spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Tore Ellingsen, chair of the Nobel’s Economic Sciences Prize Committee, told Bloomberg that the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which oversees the awards, contacted the university to make sure they had a fair process to handle the accusation­s.

“As long as the university has not determined that Dybvig has done something wrong, I think we owe him an untarnishe­d celebratio­n of his great scientific achievemen­t,” Ellingsen told Bloomberg.

The Nobel Peace Prize and Foundation didn’t immediatel­y respond to email messages from the AP.

The university didn’t immediatel­y respond Friday to emails and phone messages from the AP. University spokespers­on Julie Flory told Bloomberg that the school doesn’t comment on specific cases but takes sexual misconduct seriously and will investigat­e any allegation­s.

 ?? JOSH REYNOLDS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Philip H. Dybvig poses for a photograph­er at a hotel in Boston after winning the 2022Nobel Prize for Economics on Oct. 10.
JOSH REYNOLDS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Philip H. Dybvig poses for a photograph­er at a hotel in Boston after winning the 2022Nobel Prize for Economics on Oct. 10.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States