Robert Townsend was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1948. He is the brother of John S. Townsend, a professor of physics at
Harvey Mudd College. Townsend received his B.A. from
Duke University in 1970 and Ph.D. from the
University of Minnesota in 1975. He began teaching at
Carnegie Mellon University in 1975, and became a professor at the
University of Chicago in 1985 where he stayed full-time until moving to MIT in 2008. From 1987 to 1989 Townsend was also editor of the
Journal of Political Economy. In addition to his professorships, Townsend is the Principal Investigator and Project Director of the Enterprise Initiative, funded by the
John Templeton Foundation, and the Principal Investigator of the
Consortium on Financial Systems and Poverty, funded by the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Additionally, he is a consultant for numerous institutions, including the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, the
World Bank, and
Banco de España. Townsend is a fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of
The Econometric Society, as well as an Elected Member of the
National Academy of Sciences. He was the recipient of the
Jean-Jacques Laffont Prize in 2011, and a
Frisch Medal in 1998 for his work on village India and in 2012 for the structural evaluation of a large-scale microfinance program in Thailand; Townsend is the award's only two-time winner. ==Research==