Merton H. Miller

@Intellectuals & Academics, Birthday and Childhood

Merton H

May 16, 1923

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: May 16, 1923
  • Died on: June 3, 2000
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Intellectuals & Academics, Economists
  • City/State: Illinois
  • Spouses: Eleanor Miller (d. 1969), Katherine Miller
  • Birth Place: Chicago, Illinois, United States

Merton H. Miller born at

Chicago, Illinois, United States

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Birth Place

In 1943, soon after graduating from the Harvard University, Merton Miller married Eleanor Natalie Cohen, also from Boston. They had three daughters; Pamela, born in 1952; Margot in 1955 and Louise in 1958. His wife died in 1969.

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Personal Life

He later married Katherine Miller, but did not have any further children. While they mostly lived in their townhouse in Hyde Park, they also had a country retreat in Woodstock, where they spent their weekends, tending the garden. He was also fond of football and was a supporter of Chicago Bears.

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Personal Life

On June 3, 2000, Miller died in his home in Chicago from lymphoma at the age of seventy seven. He was survived by his second wife Katherine, three daughters and two grandsons, Andrew and Eric.

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Personal Life

Merton Howard Miller was born on May 16, 1923 in Boston, Massachusetts. His father, Joel Miller, was a second generation Jewish emigrant, whose cigar-making family emigrated from England in the middle of the nineteenth century. He was an established attorney-at-law, later representing his state in Republican National Convention.

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Childhood & Early Years

Soon after his marriage to Sylvia Francis Starr, a Yiddish Russian, who had come to the USA with her family at the age of sixteen, Joel started publishing a local newspaper, mainly to supplement his income.

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Childhood & Early Years

While reporting certain incidents involving judges, Joel Miller became interested in law. Already an AB from Harvard University, he began to study law at Suffolk Law School, finally establishing his own legal practice in 1929, just before the onset of the Great Depression. He was then thirty-five years old.

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Childhood & Early Years

Merton, born in the Roaring Twenties, was his parents’ only child. His early years were passed in Dorchester, a working-class area in Boston. Later as the Great Depression set in, he watched people suffering all around.

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Childhood & Early Years

However, Joel had by then set up his practice. Therefore, he was able to secure good education for his son, enrolling him at the prestigious Boston Latin School; a public school established in 1635 for educating the sons of the city’s elite.

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Childhood & Early Years

In 1952, soon after receiving his PhD, Merton Miller was appointed as the Visiting Assistant Lecturer at the London School of Economics for the 1952-53 session. Immediately on his return in 1953, he joined the Graduate School of Industrial Administration in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania.

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Joining Carnegie Institute of Technology

Located in the campus of the Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie-Mellon University), it was one of the most influential research-oriented business schools in the USA. Here he met Franco Modigliani and began collaborating with him in the area of corporate finance.

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Joining Carnegie Institute of Technology

According to some sources, both Miller and Modigliani were assigned to teach corporate finance. However, none of them had any knowledge about optimal capital structure of a firm. Therefore, they began to read the available literature diligently and were surprised to find that there was no unified or accepted principle on the subject.

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Joining Carnegie Institute of Technology

Soon they started working on it, looking at the problem from different directions. In 1958, they jointly published their first paper, ‘The Cost of Capital, Corporate Finance and the Theory of Investment’ in ‘American Economic Review.’ It later became known as Modigliani-Miller theorem or M&M theorem.

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Joining Carnegie Institute of Technology

Thereafter, they continued collaborating on the same subject, jointly publishing a number of papers on corporate finance. Among them, the most significant was ‘Dividend Policy, Growth, and the Valuation of Shares’. Published in 1961, the work extended the basic results of their earlier work and showed that, given investment decisions, dividend policy is also irrelevant.

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Joining Carnegie Institute of Technology

Also in 1961, Merton Miller moved to the Graduate School of Business at the University of Chicago as a faculty member while Modigliani joined MIT in 1962. In spite of that, they continued collaborating on several other issues until the mid-1960s.

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At the University of Chicago

In 1966, Miller moved to Belgium for a one-year visiting professorship at the University of Louvain. Returning to the University of Chicago in 1967, he continued to work on corporate finance. Sometime now, he was appointed the R. McCormick Distinguished Service Professor of Finance.

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At the University of Chicago

Meanwhile in 1972, working with his colleague Eugene Fama, he further developed the work he had started with Modigliani and co-wrote ‘The Theory of Finance’. Incidentally, Fama was his first doctoral student.

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At the University of Chicago

From the early 1980s, his focus began to shift away from capital finance. In 1983, he became the Public Director of Chicago Board of Trade, a position he held till 1985. Thereafter from 1990, he became the Public Director of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, holding the position till his death.

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At the University of Chicago

As a result of his involvements with the financial exchanges, he now became more interested in the problems faced by the financial services industry. His work now focused on the economic and regulatory problems faced by the securities and options exchanges.

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At the University of Chicago