Frank Lichtenberg
Cain Brothers & Company Professor of Healthcare Management in the Faculty of Business
Economics
Cain Brothers & Company Professor of Healthcare Management in the Faculty of Business
Healthcare and Pharmaceutical Management Program
BA, University of Chicago, 1973; MA, University of Pennsylvania, 1976; PhD, 1982
Joined CBS in 1983
Office:
522
Kravis
Phone:
212-854-4408
E-mail:
[email protected]
Fax:
212-854-7647
Personal Website
Curriculum Vitae
Biography
Frank R. Lichtenberg is Cain Brothers & Company Professor of Healthcare Management in the Faculty of Business Economics at the Columbia University Graduate School of Business; a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research; and a member of the CESifo Research Network. He received a BA with Honors in History from the University of Chicago and an MA and PhD in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania.
Mr. Lichtenberg previously taught at Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Ecole Polytechnique. He has served as an expert for the Federal Trade Commission, the U.S. Dept. of Justice, and state Attorneys General, and has testified before Congress. He has worked for several U.S. government agencies, including the Department of Justice, the Congressional Budget Office, and the Census Bureau, and been a visiting scholar at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin, the University of Munich, and elsewhere.
Some of Professor Lichtenberg’s research has examined how the introduction of new technology arising from research and development affects the productivity of companies, industries and nations. He has performed studies of the impact of pharmaceutical innovation on longevity, the effect of computers on productivity in business and government organizations, and the consequences of takeovers and leveraged buyouts for efficiency and employment. His articles have been published in numerous scholarly journals and in the popular press. His book Corporate Takeovers and Productivity has been published by MIT Press.
He was awarded the 1998 Schumpeter Prize for his paper, Pharmaceutical Innovation as a Process of Creative Destruction; the 2003 Milken Institute Award for Distinguished Economic Research for the paper, Pharmaceutical Knowledge-Capital Accumulation and Longevity; and Research!America’s 2010 Garfield Economic Impact Award for the paper, The effect of new cancer drug approvals on the life expectancy of American cancer patients, 1978-2004.
He has been awarded research fellowships, grants, and contracts by the National Science Foundation, the World Health Organization, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Merck and Co., the Fulbright Commission, the Brookings Institution, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, The German Marshall Fund, the American Enterprise Institute, and other organizations. He has served as a consultant to private organizations and government agencies including the Securities Industry Association, Pfizer, Inc., the Community Preservation Corporation, the RAND Corporation, the New York City Water Board, Touche Ross and Co., The Walt Disney Company, McGraw-Hill, and the National Pharmaceutical Council. He is an affiliate of the economics consulting firm Analysis Group.
Teaching
Spring 2022
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(MBA)
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(EMBA)
Spring 2021
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(MBA)
Summer 2021
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(EMBA)
Spring 2020
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(MBA)
Managerial Economics
(EMBA)
Summer 2020
Managerial Economics Continued
(EMBA)
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(EMBA)
Spring 2019
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(MBA)
Managerial Economics
(EMBA)
Summer 2019
Managerial Economics Continued
(EMBA)
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(EMBA)
Spring 2018
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(MBA)
Managerial Economics
(EMBA)
Summer 2018
Managerial Economics Continued
(EMBA)
Economics of Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
(EMBA)
Columbia Caseworks cases
Can Health Technology Assessment Help Control Drug Costs?
(2016)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Research
Journal articles
The contribution of pharmaceutical innovation to longevity growth in Germany and France, 2001–2007
In PharmacoEconomics
(2012)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Has Pharmaceutical Innovation Reduced Social Security Disability Growth?
In International Journal of the Economics of Business
(2011)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Despite steep costs, payments for new cancer drugs make economic sense
In Nature Medicine
(2011)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The quality of medical care, behavioral risk factors, and longevity growth
In International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
(2011)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
What Are the Respective Roles of the Public and Private Sectors in Pharmaceutical Innovation?
In Health Affairs
(2011)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg, Bhaven Sampat
Are Increasing 5-Year Survival Rates Evidence of Success Against Cancer? A Reexamination Using Data from the U.S. and Australia
In Forum for Health Economics & Policy
(2010)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Pharmaceutical innovation and mortality in the United States, 1960–2000. A commentary on Schnittker and Karandinos
In Social Science and Medicine
(2010)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Pharmaceutical Price Discrimination and Social Welfare
In <a href="http://www.bepress.com/cas/vol5/iss1/art2">Capitalism and Society</a>
(2010)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The effect of drug vintage on survival: Micro evidence from Puerto Rico's Medicaid program
In Advances in health economics and health services research
(2010)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Availability of New Drugs and Americans' Ability to Work
In Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Impact of New Drug Launches on Longevity: Evidence from Longitudinal, Disease-Level Data from 52 Countries, 1982-2001
In International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Effects of Medicare on Health Care Utilization and Outcomes
In Frontiers in Health Policy Research
(2002)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Do (More and Better) Drugs Keep People Out of Hospitals?
In American Economic Review
(1996)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Private R and D Investment Response to Federal Design and Technical Competitions
In American Economic Review
(1988)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Comparative Advantage of Educated Workers in Implementing New Technology
In Review of Economics and Statistics
(1987)
Coauthor(s): Ann Bartel, Frank Lichtenberg
Books
Corporate Takeovers and Productivity
(1992)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Chapters
Pharmaceutical Knowledge-Capital Accumulation and Longevity
In Measuring Capital in the New Economy
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Web-only articles
Importation and Innovation
In Chazen Web Journal of International Business
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Pharmaceutical Innovation and the Burden of Disease in Developing and Developed Countries
In Chazen Web Journal of International Business
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Working papers
The Impact of Biomedical Knowledge Accumulation on Mortality: A Bibliometric Analysis of Cancer Data
In Working Paper No. 19593
(2013)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Impact of New (Orphan) Drug Approvals on Premature Mortality from Rare Diseases in the U.S. and France, 1999–2007
(2011)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Has medical innovation reduced cancer mortality?
In Working Paper No. 15880
(2010)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Is Home Health Care a Substitute for Hospital Care?
(2010)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The impact of medical knowledge accumulation and diffusion on health: Evidence from Medline and other N.I.H. data
(2010)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Quality of Medical Care, Behavioral Risk Factors, and Longevity Growth
In NBER Working Papers, Working Paper 15068
(2009)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Benefits and Costs of Newer Drugs: An Update
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Pharmaceutical-Embodied Technical Progress, Longevity, and Quality of Life: Drugs as 'Equipment for Your Health'
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg, Suchin Virabhak
Sources of U.S. Longevity Increase, 1960-1997
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Dual Effects of Intellectual Property Regulations: Within- and Between-Patent Competition in the U.S. Pharmaceuticals Industry
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Effect of Changes in Drug Utilization on Labor Supply and Per Capita Output
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Effect of Education on Medical Technology Adoption: Are the More Educated More Likely to Use New Drugs?
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Adriana Lleras-Muney, Frank Lichtenberg
The Expanding Pharmaceutical Arsenal in the War on Cancer
In NBR Working Paper 10328
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Impact of New Drug Launches on Longevity: From 52 Countries, 1982-2001
(2005)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Effect of New Drugs on Mortality from Rare Diseases and HIV
In NBER Working Paper 8677
(2002)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Benefits and Costs of Newer Drugs: Evidence from the 1996 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
In NBER Working Paper 8147
(2001)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Pharmaceutical Innovation, Mortality Reduction, and Economic Growth
In NBER Working Paper W6569
(1998)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Allocation of Publicly-Funded Biomedical Research
In NBER Working Paper 6601
(1998)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
The Effect of Pharmaceutical Utilization and Innovation on Hospitalization and Mortality
In NBER Working Paper No. W5418
(1996)
Coauthor(s): Frank Lichtenberg
Ideas and Insights
In The Media
Expensive Prescription Drugs Are a Bargain
Delta Air Lines’ Raising Insurance Rates for Unvaccinated Makes Dense — and It’s a Scary Idea
Creating a Covid-19 Vaccine Is Only the First Step. Reaching the World Is the Next.
How Much Could Pfizer Make from a COVID-19 Vaccine?
Why You Should Take Coronavirus Vaccine News with a Grain of Salt
Press Releases
Awards And Honors
For the publication "The Effect of New Cancer Drug Approvals on the Life Expectancy of American Cancer Patients, 1978 - 2004
For the paper "Pharmaceutical knowledge-capital accumulation and longevity"
For the paper "Pharmaceutical innovation as a process of creative destruction"