Banerjee is currently the Ford Foundation International Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; he has taught at
Harvard University and
Princeton University. He has also been a
Guggenheim Fellow and an
Alfred P. Sloan Fellow. He was elected a fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2004. In 2009, he received the
Infosys Prize in the social sciences (economics) category. He served on the Social Sciences jury for the
Infosys Prize in 2018. In 2012, he shared the
Gerald Loeb Award Honorable Mention for Business Book with co-author Esther Duflo for their book
Poor Economics. In 2013, he was named by the United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon to a panel of experts tasked with updating the
Millennium Development Goals after 2015 (their expiration date). In 2014, he received the Bernhard-Harms-Prize from the
Kiel Institute for the World Economy. In 2019, he delivered Export-Import Bank of India's 34th Commencement Day Annual Lecture on Redesigning Social Policy. That same year, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics, together with Esther Duflo and
Michael Kremer, "for their experimental approach to alleviating global poverty". In October 2025, the
University of Zurich announced that Banerjee and Duflo would be joining the faculty of the UZH Faculty of Business, Economics, and Informatics in July 2026, where they would co-direct the newly established Lemann Center for Development, Education and Public Policy. The center and Banerjee and Duflo's endowed professorships were created following a 26 million franc (US$32.5 million) donation from Swiss-Brazilian billionaire
Jorge Paulo Lemann's Lemann Foundation. The couple would maintain part-time positions at MIT.
Research and work in India Banerjee and his co-workers try to measure the effectiveness of actions (such as government programmes) in improving people's lives. For this, they use
randomized controlled trials, similar to clinical trials in medical research. For example, although
polio vaccination is freely available in India, many mothers were not bringing their children for the vaccination drives. Banerjee and Prof. Esther Duflo, also from MIT, tried an experiment in
Rajasthan, where they gave a bag of pulses to mothers who vaccinated their children. Soon, the immunization rate went up in the region. In another experiment, they found that learning outcomes improved in schools that were provided with teaching assistants to help students with special needs. Banerjee is a co-founder of
Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (along with economists
Esther Duflo and
Sendhil Mullainathan). In India he serves on the academic advisory board of Plaksha University, a science and technology university established in 2010. Banerjee wrote a cookbook in 2021,
Cooking To Save Your Life, published by Juggernaut. ==Personal life==