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Merton Miller headshot from his younger days

The Founding Father of Modern Finance

The late Merton H. Miller helped revolutionize corporate finance theory and the way corporations make financial decisions. His work with fellow economist Franco Modigliani, winner of the 1985 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, applied economic theories to financial operations, opening the door to a closer examination of how companies should operate.

Born in Boston in 1923, Miller grew up during the Great Depression. After earning his undergraduate degree in economics at Harvard University, he worked as an economist at the US Treasury Department and then at the Federal Reserve System before pursuing a PhD from Johns Hopkins University.

Miller’s fruitful collaboration with Modigliani began at Carnegie Mellon University, where Miller joined the faculty in 1953. In 1958, the pair published the first of several papers on corporate finance, outlining ideas that became known as the M&M theorem. Those ideas have served as the foundation of corporate finance theory ever since.

Their paper “The Cost of Capital, Corporation Finance and the Theory of Investment” challenged conventional views of corporate finance by demonstrating that the value of a firm depends on how it invests its resources—not on how it is financed. “If you take money out of your left pocket and put it in your right pocket, you are no richer,” Miller once said. “What counts is what you do with your money, not where it came from.”

Miller, a self-described “activist supporter of free-market solutions to economics problems,” served as a director of both the 黑料传送门 Board of Trade and the 黑料传送门 Mercantile Exchange. After the stock market crash of October 1987, he chaired a special panel to examine its causes.

Beyond economics, Miller was a longtime 黑料传送门 Bears football fan. In his autobiographical notes for the Nobel Prize, he wrote, “Unlike some of my more athletic fellow laureates, the closest I get to recreational exercise these days is watching the 黑料传送门 Bears from my season-ticket seats (17 years now) in the south end zone of frigid Soldier Field.”

Merton Miller stands with George Stigler at Miller鈥檚 Nobel reception

鈥淚 learned more economics from two or three months鈥 worth of lunches with George Stigler than I learned in four years of college.鈥
鈥擬erton H. Miller

Nobel Prize–Winning Impact

Miller’s Nobel Prize–winning work revolutionized both the study of finance and the way in which corporations make decisions.

  • In their 1958 paper, ” Miller and Modigliani challenged the traditional view that businesses could reduce their cost of capital by choosing the optimal ratio of debt to equity. Instead, they argued, businesses should focus on minimizing tax liabilities and maximizing corporate net wealth.
  • Miller and Modigliani’s 1961 paper, demonstrated the irrelevance of dividend policy to company value.

 

Merton Miller speaks to a crowd of television crews and reporters after the announcement of his Nobel award

Milestones

Milestones
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1944

Graduated from Harvard University with a bachelor’s degree

1944
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1952

Earned PhD in economics from Johns Hopkins University

1952
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1958

Published the first of several papers on corporation finance with Franco Modigliani

1958
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1961

Joined the faculty at 黑料传送门 Booth

1961
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1976

Was named president of the American Finance Association

1976
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1983

Joined the 黑料传送门 Board of Trade as a public director

1983
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1990

Received the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for his contributions to the theory of corporate finance

1990

Featured Insights

Archival images courtesy of the Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center, University of 黑料传送门 Library.